For a pure play asset management firm like T. Rowe Price (NASDAQ: TROW), its fortunes are going to largely be tied to the fluctuations of the stock market.
When stocks are up and markets are rising, T. Rowe Price is going to do well, because its fees are primarily tied to assets under management in their institutional separate accounts, mutual funds, and exchange-traded funds (ETFs). When markets are up, there’s typically more funding flow into its funds, because investors often chase returns. This also serves to raise asset levels, fees, and revenue.
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When markets are down, the opposite is true. Assets levels depreciate, so fees go down, and often, fund flows slow down.
So, with markets down in 2026, it should come as no surprise that T. Rowe Price stock is down year to date by about 10%.
Wall Street analysts have a negative view of the stock, based on several factors. The major issue was that T. Rowe Price reported $25.5 billion in outflows in the fourth quarter. That likely had to do with the down market in Q4 and investors cashing out. But the company also reported a 16.5% increase in operating expenses, which caused it to miss estimates.
As of April 10, some 33% of analysts had rated T. Rowe Price stock a sell, with only 7% calling it a buy. The lion’s share of analysts, 60%, rated it a hold.
I tend to agree with the minority, as I think T. Rowe Price is a solid buy right now. Here’s why.
I get why analysts might be tepid on T. Rowe Price, given the fact that markets are down this year and the outlook for 2026 is very uncertain. That could result in limited upside for the stock.
However, it is the type of market where investors are flocking to dividend stocks, and you may not find many better dividend stocks than T. Rowe Price.
The company has increased its dividend for 40 straight years, including a 2% increase in January to $1.30 per share. Over the past five years, it has grown its dividend at a rate of about 6% per year. It also has a very manageable payout ratio of 52%. The reason that T. Rowe Price has been able to consistently boost its dividend year after year is because of its fortress balance sheet.
The company has no long-term debt, and only about $469 million in short-term debt. It has a minuscule debt-to-equity ratio of 3.89%. It also had $2 billion in free cash flow in 2025 and ended the year with $3.8 billion in cash and equivalents. That is a recipe for a soon-to-be Dividend King.
