Littelfuse, Inc. (NASDAQ:LFUS) will begin trading ex-dividend on November 18, 2020. The quarterly dividend payment of $ 0.48 per share is scheduled to be paid on December 3, 2020. The dividend yield based on the latest trading day closing price was 0.85 percent. To secure the dividend payout, investors must buy the stock prior to the ex-dividend date of November 18, 2020.
Dividends History
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Littelfuse, Inc. recently reported third quarter financial results on October 28, 2020, before market open, the Chicago based company posted income for the third quarter of $ 2.16 per share, from the revenue of $ 391.57 million. The quarterly earnings surged 34.16 percent while revenues developed 8.18 percent compared with the same quarter last year.
Wall street analysts are predicting, LFUS to report 3Q20 income of $ 1.14 per share from revenue of $ 351.58 million. The bottom line results beat street analysts by $ 1.02 or 89.47 percent, at the same time, top line results outshined analysts by $ 39.99 million or 11.37 percent.
Stock Performance
On Friday, shares of Littelfuse, Inc. has traded high as $ 226.48 and has cracked $ 220.00 on the downward trend, reaching $ 224.93 with volume of 140.90 thousand shares.
According to the previous trading day, closing price of $ 224.93, representing a 111.67 % increase from the 52 week low of $ 103.63 and a 3.26 % decrease over the 52 week high of $ 226.74.
The company has a market capital of $ 5.48 billion and is part of the Technology sector and Electronics Distribution industry.
Littelfuse, Inc. designs, manufactures, and sells circuit protection, power control, and sensing products worldwide. The companys Electronics segment offers fuses and fuse accessories, positive temperature coefficient resettable fuses, polymer electrostatic discharge suppressors, varistors, magnetic sensing products, and gas discharge tubes; and discrete transient voltage suppressor (TVS) diodes, TVS diode arrays, protection and switching thyristors, silicon carbide, metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistors, and silicon carbide diodes, as well as insulated gate bipolar transistors.