Current average yield 5.9 % on dividends with some nice 5 - 10 % capital appreciation on top.
V * = Intrinsic value EPS = Trailing twelve months earnings / share 8.5 = P / E base for a no - growth company g = Expected long term earnings growth rate 4.4 = Average yield of high - grade corporate bonds in 1962, when the formula was introduced Y =
Current average yield on 20 year AAA corporate bonds
Not exact matches
The
average BB rated bond, which is what Dell's
current debt is rated, is trading at a
yield of 5.8 %.
The
average yield on the 10 - year Treasury note over the past 30 years is 4.834 percent, still well above
current levels.
-LSB-...] the long - term returns on bonds will certainly be lower than
average based on the
current yields.
It seeks (1) to provide a level of
current income that exceeds the
average yield on U.S. stocks generally and (2) to provide a growing stream of income over the years.
(If you're looking to remove some rate risk from your 401 (k) portfolio, check if there is a so - called stable value fund in your plan; the
average current yield is 1.8 percent, according to Hueler Analytics.)
The
current yield is 5.03 % — much higher than the
average 3.5 %
yield I strive for in building my portfolio.
December's implied
yield of 1.01 percent is only 6 percent of the way from the
current Fed funds target of 1.00 percent toward the
average effective rate of 1.17 percent.
As usual, I don't place too much emphasis on this sort of forecast, but to the extent that I make any comments at all about the outlook for 2006, the bottom line is this: 1) we can't rule out modest potential for stock appreciation, which would require the maintenance or expansion of already high price / peak earnings multiples; 2) we also should recognize an uncomfortably large potential for market losses, particularly given that the
current bull market has now outlived the median and
average bull, yet at higher valuations than most bulls have achieved, a flat
yield curve with rising interest rate pressures, an extended period of internal divergence as measured by breadth and other market action, and complacency at best and excessive bullishness at worst, as measured by various sentiment indicators; 3) there is a moderate but still not compelling risk of an oncoming recession, which would become more of a factor if we observe a substantial widening of credit spreads and weakness in the ISM Purchasing Managers Index in the months ahead, and; 4) there remains substantial potential for U.S. dollar weakness coupled with «unexpectedly» persistent inflation pressures, particularly if we do observe economic weakness.
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.
Current dividend
yield of 6.97 %, the
average company in the S&P 500 has a
yield of around 2 %.
Its
current yield of 4.5 % is just under its 5 - year
average yield of 4.6 % (per Morningstar).
Too, this group offers an
average yield of roughly 3.5 %, well above the
current 2.0 % median for all dividend - paying stocks in the Value Line universe.
To give you an idea of possible
yields, the
current average dividend yield for stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average is
average dividend
yield for stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial
Average is
Average is 3.03 %.
In general, when I experience a massive sell off in one of my holdings, and I still believe in the company / industry as a whole, I simply buy more and
average down my cost and enjoy a higher
yield on my
current buy.
Still, CAT is a dividend machine that is currently
yielding a high 5.04 % and a
current PE of 12.7 which is well below its five year
average.
The
current yield is 2.33 % — lower than the
average 3.5 %
yield I strive for in building my portfolio.
They simulate future bond
yield as a linear function of
current bond
yield with noise, assuming a long - term
average of 5 % and bounds of 1 % and 10 %.
Moreover, even under a very stressed scenario — in which Spain is forced to finance the $ 200 - 220 billion it needs from today until early 2014 at
yields of 8 - 9 per cent — the effect on the
average interest rate of the total outstanding debt would be limited, rising from the
current 4.1 per cent to about 5 per cent.
To calculate the rate for the upcoming quarter (October to December 2013), we go back to the first month of the
current quarter (July) and take the
average of July's T - Bill
yields, which were 1.0241 % (July 3), 1.0193 % (July 17) and 1.0132 % (July 31).
As you can see, Southern's
current yield is about equal to its long - term
average.
According to Brian, not only is the stock's forward P / E ratio of 15.0 much lower than its historical norm of 19.1, but its
current dividend
yield of 2 % is nearly double the company's 22 - year
average yield of 1.2 %.
The roughly 1.7 per cent
current yield on a 10 - year Government of Canada bond is still well below its historical
average over the past 30 years, according to Bloomberg data.
Note on the «Dividend
Yield %» line that PG's current 3.0 % yield is the same as its 5 - year average yield shown in the last co
Yield %» line that PG's
current 3.0 %
yield is the same as its 5 - year average yield shown in the last co
yield is the same as its 5 - year
average yield shown in the last co
yield shown in the last column.
So its
current yield (3.0 %) is about its
average for the past 5 years or so.
Bargain Issues — here Graham focuses on «
average past earning power» and compares it with
current market value and recommends stocks which have high earnings
yield (i.e. low P / E) ratios based on
average plus a strong balance sheet.
The
current yield is thus 21 % higher than
average, suggesting the stock is significantly undervalued.
[The percentage earnings
yield is 100 / [P / E10] where P / E10 is the
current price of the S&P 500 index and E10 is the
average of the most recent ten years of earnings.
But the following five stocks all pay
current yields well in excess of the market
average.
Intel Corp. has the lowest
current yield among the passing companies with its 0.6 %
yield, well above its seven - year
average high
yield figure of 0.4 % (Table 2).
The
current dividend
yield is 4.11 %, which is great compared to the S&P 500
average of 1.7 %.
With a little research you can find the
current average dividend
yield for stocks and from there, you can find stocks whose
current yield is significantly higher (or lower).
Current YOC: My personal dividend
yield on cost when factoring in my
average purchase prices with the annual dividend as it currently stands..
These have an
average dividend
yield of 4 %, approximately three percentage points above the
current yield on 10 - year TIPS, and over one percentage point ahead of the
yield on standard 10 - year Treasury bonds.
Earnings
Yield reflects a company's past four - year
average earnings before interest and tax, divided by its
current enterprise value (enterprise value = market value + debt — cash).
Under
current conditions (record earnings and a narrow
yield curve) profits have grown an
average of just 2.1 % annually over the next three years.
Consequently, I believe it offers the rare combination of above -
average and growing
current yield with the opportunity to generate above -
average capital appreciation over the long run and perhaps the short run as well.
Using this data it is possible to infer the dividend
yield for each period that is used, along with the
average payout ratio, from the
current MSCI data to calculate the earnings per share and CAPE prior to 2005.
But best of all, Cardinal Health meets my
current investment objective because it provides an above -
average current dividend
yield coupled with above -
average dividend growth.
High Real
Yields First, note that emerging market sovereign bonds not only provide an attractive
current yield relative to other market opportunities, but they are also relatively cheap compared to their historical
average.
And its
current yield of 2.18 % is considerably higher than the five - year
average of 1.4 %.
Index A published interest rate against which lenders measure the difference between the
current interest rate on an adjustable rate mortgage and that earned by other investments (such as one, three, and five year U.S. Treasury security
yields, the monthly
average interest rate on loans closed by savings and loan institutions, and the monthly
average costs - of - funds incurred by savings and loans), which is then used to adjust the interest rate on an adjustable mortgage up or down.
As you can see, Pepsi's
current yield is about equal to its long - term
average.
Keep in mind that this
yield is also more than 150 basis points higher than its five - year
average, which leads back to one of the points I made earlier about undervaluation and higher
yield (which then results in more
current income, more aggregate income, and potentially higher total return over the long run).
Assuming this new ETF will use a strategy similar to that of the Vanguard High Dividend
Yield (VYM), which also tracks a FTSE index, it will focus on stocks with above -
average current yields rather than dividend growth.
Pfizer's
current yield of 3.9 % is a 95 % premium to the S&P 500's 2.0 %
average.
At ETF.com, we supply
average yield to maturity figures for all bond ETFs, as it is the most accurate look at the
current real - world holdings
yield of a bond, in our opinion.
That gives shares a
current yield of 11.3 %, more than a 400 % premium to the S&P 500's
average 2.0 %
yield.
Rather than rely on past
averages to forecast future returns, we use a building - block approach that adds
current yield, likely long - term growth in income, and some mean reversion in valuation multiples to create forward - looking returns.