Is Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.'s (MRSH) Dividend Safe?
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. dividend safety review using yield, payout ratio, FCF payout, dividend growth, EPS support, and TGMCharts chart exhibits as of July 10, 2026.
By TGMCharts Research · Data as of · Updated
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. has a supported dividend setup only if earnings and cash flow continue to cover the payment. The current yield is 2.02%, with payout ratio at 42.45% and free-cash-flow payout ratio at 35.58%.
Dividend history matters, but the engine treats coverage as the decisive evidence. Consecutive increases stand at 16 years, while five-year dividend CAGR is 13.27% against five-year EPS CAGR of 16.34%.
- Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. yields 2.02% and pays $3.60 per share.
- The payout ratio is 42.45% and the free-cash-flow payout ratio is 35.58%.
- Consecutive dividend increases stand at 16 years.
- Five-year dividend CAGR is 13.27% versus five-year EPS CAGR of 16.34%.
- Net margin is 14.26% and trailing P/E is 22.29x.
Dividend snapshot
The current payout, cash-flow coverage, and growth facts behind the dividend read.
The Read
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. starts the dividend safety check with a 2.02% yield, a dividend of $3.60 per share, and 16 years of consecutive increases. That history matters, but it does not settle the safety question by itself. The safety read depends on whether earnings, free cash flow, and dividend growth still support the payment.
The current payout ratio is 42.45% and the free-cash-flow payout ratio is 35.58%. Reading those together matters because a dividend is safest when accounting earnings and cash generation point in the same direction. When they diverge, the cash-flow exhibit deserves more weight than the streak.
MRSH dividend yield Chart
Dividend yield is the market-facing income exhibit and the first check for whether the current payout looks unusually attractive or stressed.
Latest dividend yield: 2.02%.
A yield of 2.02% is only useful when paired with payout support. A high yield can be a real income opportunity, but it can also reflect price pressure if earnings and free cash flow are not keeping up.
Dividend evidence table
Dividend safety depends on yield, payment growth, earnings coverage, and cash-flow coverage together.
Income Context And Payment Record
The yield chart shows what the market is offering today, while the dividend-per-share chart shows what the company has actually paid. Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. has a five-year dividend CAGR of 13.27%, which is useful only if it remains aligned with the business. A payout can grow for a while from policy choice, but it eventually needs earnings and cash flow to carry it.
MRSH dividend per share Chart
Dividend per share shows the actual payment record behind the headline yield.
Latest dividend per share: $3.60.
The current dividend of $3.60 sits beside a record of 16 years of consecutive increases. That history earns attention, but it still has to be supported by current earnings and cash flow.
MRSH Price Chart
Latest close: $182 as of July 10, 2026.
A dividend yield of 2.02% should be read beside the price path. If the yield is rising because price is falling while payout ratios are already high, the dividend note should become more cautious rather than more enthusiastic.
Coverage Evidence Across The Payout
The primary exhibit is dividend yield because it captures the first question an income investor asks. The supporting exhibits then move from payment history to price pressure, EPS support, free cash flow, dividend growth, and margin quality. The safest reading comes when the yield, payment path, EPS line, cash-flow line, and margin record all point in a consistent direction.
MRSH free cash flow
Free cash flow is the cash-coverage exhibit behind the accounting payout ratio.
Latest free-cash-flow payout ratio: 35.58%.
The free-cash-flow payout ratio is 35.58%, so the cash-flow chart matters as much as the earnings chart. A dividend can look acceptable on EPS while still becoming fragile if cash generation falls behind the payment.
Earnings And Free Cash Flow Support
Dividend growth should not outrun the business for long. Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. shows a five-year dividend CAGR of 13.27% against a five-year EPS CAGR of 16.34%, with net margin at 14.26%. If dividend growth is ahead of EPS growth, the payout and free-cash-flow exhibits become the decisive part of the note.
MRSH EPS
EPS history checks whether the earnings base is growing with the dividend.
Five-year EPS CAGR: 16.34%. This is endpoint-to-endpoint from the fiscal years shown — a depressed or negative start year can inflate it, so read it against the recent bars.
Five-year EPS CAGR of 16.34% is the earnings test for dividend growth. If dividend growth keeps running ahead of EPS, the engine should treat the article as needing a more cautious refresh.
MRSH dividend growth Chart
Dividend growth shows whether the payment has been compounding at a pace the business can sustain.
Five-year dividend CAGR: 13.27%.
A five-year dividend CAGR of 13.27% needs to be compared with the five-year EPS CAGR of 16.34%. The dividend story is healthier when those two lines are moving in the same broad direction.
MRSH net margin
Net margin helps distinguish a stable payout from one that depends on thin profitability.
Net margin (TTM): 14.26%. The bars below are annual fiscal years.
Net margin of 14.26% gives the dividend note a business-quality check. Strong margins do not guarantee safety, but weak or declining margins can reduce the cushion behind future increases.
Counterpoints And Risks
The main counterpoint is that a long dividend history can hide a narrowing cushion. A payout ratio of 42.45% and a free-cash-flow payout ratio of 35.58% should be watched together. If cash flow weakens, the dividend may look safer in the headline record than it is in the operating data.
Bull and bear case
Dividend support
- The dividend record is backed by 16 years of consecutive increases.
- The current yield of 2.02% is supported best when EPS and free cash flow remain aligned.
Dividend pressure
- The payout ratio at 42.45% leaves less room if earnings weaken.
- The free-cash-flow payout ratio of 35.58% is the cash check that can change the view quickly.
What Could Change The View
The dividend read should change if payout ratios move materially higher, if EPS growth falls behind dividend growth, or if the stored dividend record stops supporting the current payment. The nightly refresh should mark the article stale before those changes drift into the published page.
Methodology And Caveat
Every figure here is checked against the company's reported data, and the note is re-checked after each daily market-data update. It is not a buy or sell call: dividend safety can change quickly if earnings, cash flow, or management policy changes.
FAQ
Is MRSH's dividend safe?
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. yields 2.02% with a payout ratio of 42.45% and a free-cash-flow payout ratio of 35.58%. Those figures need to stay supported by EPS and cash flow for the dividend case to remain intact.
What supports MRSH's dividend?
The support comes from the dividend record, payout ratios, EPS growth, and the reported dividend growth path. Consecutive increases stand at 16 years.
What would make MRSH's dividend less safe?
A weaker safety read would come from a higher payout ratio, a higher free-cash-flow payout ratio, or dividend growth running ahead of five-year EPS CAGR of 16.34%.
What would change our mind
- Payout ratio moving materially above the current 42.45%.
- Free-cash-flow payout ratio deteriorating from 35.58%.
- Dividend growth running ahead of five-year EPS CAGR, currently 16.34%.
The bottom line
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. dividend safety research note from TGMCharts Research, grounded in precomputed fundamentals, chart exhibits, and a frozen claim ledger.
Read next: MRSH fundamentalsContinue with Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.'s full stock page.How we checked this researchShowHide
Data snapshot · By TGMCharts Research.
Every number in this note comes from data we compute and store ourselves from the company's reported figures, plus verbatim excerpts from its SEC filings. When a value isn't available we say so — we never fill gaps with estimates.
Latest filing excerpt
10-Q · filed 2026-04-16 · period 2026-03-31 · SEC EDGAR source
- “Diluted earnings per share decreased to $2.36 from $2.79, or 15% from the prior year, reflecting a decrease in operating income.”
- “Consolidated revenue increased 4% on an underlying basis, 3% from the impact of foreign currency translation, and 1% from acquisitions.”
- “On an underlying basis, revenue increased 3% and 5% for the three months ended March 31, 2026, in the Risk and Insurance Services and Consulting segments, respectively.”
- “Revenue increased 3% on both an underlying basis and from the impact of foreign currency translation.”
Source pages
Exhibit sources
Research trail
Every number, checked
Every numeric or dated claim in this note was checked against our stored company data before publishing — each figure below links to the page it comes from.