For shorter periods (of 10 or 20 years), you must make adjustments for valuation changes in the Price to Dividend ratio (or dividend yield since the Price to Dividend ratio equals one
divided by the dividend yield).
Scaling by the 1.725 factor (which is the dividend yield of DVY
divided by the dividend yield of the S&P 500): dividend investors should be able to get yields of 4.7 % to 6.0 % from good companies in 3 to 7 years.
Not exact matches
Dividend Yield Annual
dividends per share
divided by share price.
Within each segment, rank stocks based on total net payout
yield (NPY), calculated as
dividend yield minus change in shares outstanding
divided by its 24 - month moving average.
The current
dividend is expressed in the «
yield metric» — which is the yearly
dividend divided by its yearly stock price.
The
dividend yield is calculated
by dividing the annual
dividend payment
by the average purchase price.
Dividend yield is calculated by dividing dividend per share by the company's shar
Dividend yield is calculated
by dividing dividend per share by the company's shar
dividend per share
by the company's share price.
Note: All of these
Dividend Yields are calculated as annualized dividend based on the last dividend paid in an applicable time period divided by closing price as of per
Dividend Yields are calculated as annualized
dividend based on the last dividend paid in an applicable time period divided by closing price as of per
dividend based on the last
dividend paid in an applicable time period divided by closing price as of per
dividend paid in an applicable time period
divided by closing price as of period end.
The annual amount of
dividends paid
divided by the stock price equals the
dividend yield.
The amount of money you'll receive from a
dividend all depends on the
dividend yield, which is the most recent full - year
dividend payment
divided by the current share price.
To calculate the percentage
dividend yield D, we
divide an estimate of the payout ratio (between 40 % and 60 %)
by our estimate of P / E10.
This equals the (percentage)
dividend yield D times P / E10
divided by 100.
The payout ratio equals the (percentage)
dividend yield D
divided by the percentage earnings
yield 100E10 / P.
Dividend yield is calculate as the dividend per share divided by the stock's marke
Dividend yield is calculate as the
dividend per share divided by the stock's marke
dividend per share
divided by the stock's market price.
A stock's price - earnings (P / E) ratio — its share price
divided by its earnings per share — is of particular interest to a value investor, as are the price - to - sales ratio, the
dividend yield, the price - to - book ratio, and the rate of sales growth.
Taking a look at the
dividends from September 2008 — September 2009, for example, with HYG I get a total
dividend of $ 4.84,
divided by an average share price of ~ $ 80, for a
yield of ~ 6 %.
The
dividend yield is the percentage which you get
by dividing the annual
dividend payments (total -LSB-...]
A reasonable
dividend yield: You can identify income stocks
by their high
dividend yields (the percentage you get when you
divide a company's current yearly payment
by its share price).
The emphasis is on
dividend yield — the annual
dividend divided by the stock price.
Dividend Yield: Represents the trailing 12 - month dividend yield aggregating all income distributions per share over the past year, divided by the period ending fund or stock shar
Dividend Yield: Represents the trailing 12 - month dividend yield aggregating all income distributions per share over the past year, divided by the period ending fund or stock share p
Yield: Represents the trailing 12 - month
dividend yield aggregating all income distributions per share over the past year, divided by the period ending fund or stock shar
dividend yield aggregating all income distributions per share over the past year, divided by the period ending fund or stock share p
yield aggregating all income distributions per share over the past year,
divided by the period ending fund or stock share price.
Dividend yields are calculated
by annualizing the most recent quarterly payout and
dividing by the share price.
Yield on Cost (YOC) is the annual
dividend rate of a security,
divided by its average cost basis.
(
Yield on cost is today's
dividend divided by your original purchase price.)
P / E ratio
divided by / -LRB-(5 yr) average EPS growth + (5 yr) average
Dividend Yield).
Nor should you be tempted solely
by a high
dividend yield (the percentage you get when you
divide a company's current yearly payment
by its share price).
However, it's important to avoid judging a company based solely on its
dividend yield (the percentage you get when you
divide a company's current yearly payment
by its share price).
Be wary of any blue chip stocks with unusually high
dividend yields: Investors should avoid judging a company based solely on its
dividend yield (the percentage you get when you
divide a company's current yearly payment
by its share price).
To calculate
yield on cost for a stock, an investor must
divide the stock's annual
dividend by the average cost basis per share and multiple the resulting number
by 100 (to arrive at a percentage).
Some investors will
divide the current
dividend by their original cost and say their investment is
yielding 8.6 % (1.73 ÷ 20 = 0.086).
But a stock's true
yield is its
dividend divided by its current price, not the price you paid for it.
BMO defines portfolio
yield as «the most recent income received
by the ETF in the form of
dividends, interest and other income annualized based on the payment frequency
divided by the current market value of ETF's investments.»
In this case, however, we
divide the
dividend - paying stocks into five equal groups
by dividend yield.
Dividend yield: The dividend yield is the dividend per share, divided by the current shar
Dividend yield: The
dividend yield is the dividend per share, divided by the current shar
dividend yield is the
dividend per share, divided by the current shar
dividend per share,
divided by the current share price.
A
dividend yield is the percentage you get when you
divide a stock's current yearly
dividend payment
by its price.
If you take the annual
dividend and
divide it
by the stock price, you get the
dividend yield.
For example, if a company pays total annual
dividends of $ 2 per share, and records earnings per share of $ 10, its
dividend yield equals 20 percent ($ 2
divided by $ 10).
With a couple of clicks, you've found a whole bunch of candidates for your
dividend capture strategy, all of them
yielding between 1.2 % and 2.4 % per month (the annualized rate
divided by 12).
The remaining stocks are then assigned a rank based on their
yield (the higher the
yield the higher the rank), payout ratio (the lower the payout ratio the higher the rank), 3 year
dividend growth rate, and 5/10 year Dividend Acceleration / Deceleration (5 - year average increase divided by 10 - year average in
dividend growth rate, and 5/10 year
Dividend Acceleration / Deceleration (5 - year average increase divided by 10 - year average in
Dividend Acceleration / Deceleration (5 - year average increase
divided by 10 - year average increase).
Dividend yield is equal to the company's
dividends to shareholders
divided by its and often is on a per - share basis.
Dividend yield is represented as a percentage and can be calculated
by dividing the dollar value of
dividends paid in a given year per share of stock held
by the dollar value of one share of stock.
Within each segment, rank stocks based on total net payout
yield (NPY), calculated as
dividend yield minus change in shares outstanding
divided by its 24 - month moving average.
So with today's low interest rates, investors are paying more attention to
dividend yields (a company's total annual
dividends paid per share
divided by the current stock price).
Dividend yield is calculated by dividing dividend per share by the company's shar
Dividend yield is calculated
by dividing dividend per share by the company's shar
dividend per share
by the company's share price.
That is, the payout ratio is the
dividend yield in percent
divided by the earnings
yield as a fraction E10 / P.
Yields Computing current yields on preferreds is similar to the calculation on bonds: the annual dividend is divided by the
Yields Computing current
yields on preferreds is similar to the calculation on bonds: the annual dividend is divided by the
yields on preferreds is similar to the calculation on bonds: the annual
dividend is
divided by the price.
Dividend yield is the stock's annual dividend divided by the shar
Dividend yield is the stock's annual
dividend divided by the shar
dividend divided by the share price.
Stocks»
dividend yields are quoted as the total of all (normally 4) payments in the year,
divided by the current stock price.
Analysts arrive at the
dividend yield ratio
by dividing the total
dividend payments paid per year
by the market price of the stock.
Notes: Price: Closing price per share; P / E: Price to earnings ratio; Total Return: The total return generated
by the stock over the last year;
Dividend Yield: Expected - annual - dividend divided by price, expressed as a percentage; P / B: Price to Book Value Ratio; Earnings Yield: Earnings divided by Price, expressed as a pe
Dividend Yield: Expected - annual -
dividend divided by price, expressed as a percentage; P / B: Price to Book Value Ratio; Earnings Yield: Earnings divided by Price, expressed as a pe
dividend divided by price, expressed as a percentage; P / B: Price to Book Value Ratio; Earnings
Yield: Earnings
divided by Price, expressed as a percentage
Wouldn't the
dividend yield be 5 % (same $ 0.50
dividend, yet now
divided by a $ 10 stock... gets you 5 %
dividend yield)?