• Excellent dividend resume:
Decent yield at 2.8 %; excellent dividend growth rate of 29 % per year over the past 3 years; 27 % increase this year; and strong dividend safety, protected by very good cash flow.
• Stellar dividend resume:
Decent yield at 2.9 %; excellent dividend growth rate of 20 % over the past 5 years; upcoming increase of 14 % in December; strong dividend safety, protected by very good cash flow; and 44 - year streak of increasing dividends.
It's hovering near its 52 - week low and appears to provide
a decent yield at 3.07 %.
• Good dividend resume:
Decent yield at 2.3 %; 40 straight years of increases; strong dividend growth record (12 % per year over past 5 years); and strong dividend safety.
• Excellent dividend resume:
Decent yield at 2.8 %; strong dividend growth rate; 15 % increase this year; and strong dividend safety, protected by very good cash flow.
• Stellar dividend resume:
Decent yield at 2.9 %; excellent dividend growth rate of 20 % over the past 5 years; upcoming increase of 14 % in December; strong dividend safety, protected by very good cash flow; and 44 - year streak of increasing dividends.
Not exact matches
My issue with using this strategy is that dividend
yields are relatively low
at 2 - 3 %, so you'd need a lot of capital to generate a
decent amount of passive income.
I'm not sure what your
yield is, but I find that I have to
at least double the recipe to get any
decent amount of muffins (10).
This leaves me considering Fortis («FTS») which offers a middle of the road
yield,
decent dividend, revenue, and EPS growth, and the lowest payout ratio,
at the cheapest valuation.
This, he suggested, means he's looking elsewhere for
decent returns on his firm's huge fixed - income investments, as U.S. government bond
yields look set to continue to wallow
at historic depths.
If treasury rates in the United States weren't
at one to two but were six or eight, we could make a good case for perhaps there's times when you would want to make profits from falling interest rates but right now I think what our investors are looking for is to have a
decent yield and be protected from their fear of rising interest rates, so until we get out of this context, I think that it's unlikely that we will deviate much from a two or three year duration portfolio.
Both trade
at low price - to - earnings ratios relative to the overall market, and both have
decent growth prospects, and both have high dividend
yields.
And finally — and perhaps most importantly — Philip Morris International was a dividend - producing powerhouse
at a time when
decent yields were hard to come by.
The SPDR website lists the
yield at closer to 8.6 %, but it still seems like a
decent income option.
When combined with a pretty
decent yield, you're looking
at attractive total returns there.
They neither provide adequate life cover
at affordable premium nor give you
decent yield.
To help home in on funds with
decent dividend
yields, start by screening for diversified domestic - equity funds with dividend
yields that are
at least as high as the S&P 500's trailing -12-month
yield of roughly 2 %.
The sell - off in U.S. and Canadian bonds has raised
yields due within 10 years to levels
at which investors can finally get
decent returns, according to Moore, who co-manages more than $ 50 billion in Canadian and U.S. fixed income for Fidelity.
At a dividend
yield just north of 3 %, shares of Nucor look like a
decent investment for those looking to bolster their retirement portfolios.
With CDs now
at historically low
yields — many earning as little as.25 % and lower — where does one go to actually earn a
decent return on their cash?
It's cheap (taking the midpoint of its guidance it's on less than 5.5 x earnings), it has got a strong balance sheet (net debt / EBITDA was 0.8 x
at end - 2010), it has a stable business model (it is the biggest distributor of fruit and vegetables in Europe, with a reach that enables it to supply multiples across different countries), it has a
decent dividend
yield (circa 4.5 %) and it is spitting out cash (free cash flow for the twelve months ended 30 June 2011 amounted to $ 29.0 m — that's nearly a quarter of the group's market cap).
JNJ is trading
at very reasonable P / E ratio of 17.50 with a
decent dividend
yield of 2.81 % and Market Cap of $ 278.85 B.
IBM is trading
at very reasonable P / E ratio of 12.90 with a
decent dividend
yield of 2.87 % and Market Cap of $ 151.72 B.
For example, Tumi bags
at eBags currently come with approximately 15 % back in eBags rewards and there is also an Amex Offer for eBags — stacking with 24x from British Airways
yields a
decent return.
It's a little refreshing to know that I have between four and a half to five hours to play around with on every charge (that's while playing a Vita game with brightness and sound a
decent way up) rather than the barely three hours the Nintendo 3DS
yields at full stretch.
If
Decent House with site sourced power
at some point undercuts first cost of Passive House and yet
yields an equivalent reduction in carbon based fuel dependency, the
Decent House will win via economics.
Lawyers
at those firms believe that blogging is unlikely to
yield a
decent return on investment.
Most insurance experts agree that a whole life policy is unlikely to
yield a
decent ROI unless it's held on to for
at least 20 years.
REITs can raise capital in the public market and leverage funds, which lets them lend
at a reasonable rate and still get a
decent yield, Korologos says.