The Dow Jones Utilities
Average nominal dividend amount is almost entirely unrelated to the earnings yield 100E10 / P of the S&P 500.
Not exact matches
If I assume a
dividend growth rate of 6 percent (about the long - run
average *), the current S&P 500
dividend yield of 2.1 percent (from multpl.com), a terminal S&P 500
dividend yield of 4 percent (Hussman says that the
dividend yield on stocks has historically
averaged about 4 percent), the expected
nominal return over ten years is 2.4 percent annually.
If I assume a
dividend growth rate of 6 percent (about the long - run
average *), the current S&P 500
dividend yield of 2.1 percent (from multpl.com), a terminal S&P 500
dividend yield of 4 percent (Hussman says that the
dividend yield on stocks has historically
averaged about 4 percent), the expected
nominal return over ten years is 2.4 percent annually.
Dividend Growth to the Rescue Since inflation averages around 3.0 % per year, the required nominal dividend growth rates are 4.0 % an
Dividend Growth to the Rescue Since inflation
averages around 3.0 % per year, the required
nominal dividend growth rates are 4.0 % an
dividend growth rates are 4.0 % and 5.5 %.
Aggregate
Dividends = (
Nominal GDP) x (Corporate Earnings as % of GDP) x (
Average Dividend Payout Ratio)
That is, aggregate
dividends can be determined arithmetically by
nominal GDP, corporate earnings as a percent of
nominal GDP, and the
average dividend payout ratio.