• Stable earnings growth in the last 20 years (correlation at least 0.8 out of 1.0) • Yearly earnings growth in the last 5 years at least 5 percent on average • Stable dividend growth in the past (correlation at least 0.9 out of 1.0) •
Yearly dividend growth in the last 5 years at least 5 percent on average • No decreasing dividends for at least 10 years • Positive outlook for the earnings of the next business year
Not exact matches
4 years later, the company has increased its
yearly dividend payment to $ 1.42 (assuming no
growth in 2016) and generate a 1.45 %
dividend yield.
Annual
dividend growth percentage is exactly what it sounds like — the
yearly growth of a company's
dividend.
4 years later, the company has increased its
yearly dividend payment to $ 1.42 (assuming no
growth in 2016) and generate a 1.45 %
dividend yield.
I spent a lot of times on my laptop learning about
dividend growth investing, reading the blogs of my fellow bloggers, building a 35k portfolio yielding more than 1000 $ of
yearly dividend income, I went through a restructuring and ended up keeping my job, my wife was pregnant but had a miscarriage... phew... So many things can happen in a year!
This interest is actually a
dividend from the life insurance company's
yearly profits, and the
growth rate is generally low compared to other investments because life insurance companies have additional expenses (like policy administration expenses and underwriting costs) that a pure asset manager does not.