I have set annual
dividend goals for both of my portfolios when I first started out back in March 2015.
I have set annual
dividend goals for both of my portfolios when I first started out back in March.
Not exact matches
The move could pay
dividends for his company by enhancing his reputation in the eyes
of the Chinese business community — and provides a good lesson about
goal - setting
for other entrepreneurs.
I can probably now safely say I won't be hitting my
goal of $ 1000 in
dividends this year but with projected annual
dividends approaching 1k, I should be able to reach that figure
for sure next year.
At Oakmark, we believe CEOs should have one
goal: to maximize the long - term value
of the business (including
dividends), adjusted
for net - debt and measured on a per - share basis.
I'd setup a
goal of earning $ 3500.00 in total passive
dividend income
for this year and have received total
of $ 473.20, 13.52 %
of target.
which means I was thinking some things correctly Every month
of new
dividends flowing in gets me closer to my
goals and motivates me to get every dollar working hard
for my freedom.
I personally believe this is a poor
dividend investing strategy as my
goal is always to aim
for quality; it is easier to figure out how to distribute the
dividends across time
for myself than to deal with the capital loss
of having bought a company which turns out to be a lemon and cuts its
dividend.
The rise
of Man United wonderkid Marcus Rashford has paid big
dividends for the club as they have won every game in which he has scored a
goal so far.
It paid
dividends as Nacho Monreal scored his first
goal for the club in the 74th minute, before Gervinho scored his first
goal in a century, after running clear
of the entire Swans» defence.
Jonathan K. DeYoe, AIF and CPWA, is the author
of Mindful Money: Simple Practices
for Reaching Your Financial
Goals and Increasing Your Happiness
Dividend.
Below I will report my
dividend income
for August and my progress towards reaching my
dividend related
goals for both
of these portfolios.
I set 4
goals for this portfolio in 2015: receive $ 1,500 in
dividends, diversify across all sectors, own 30 different companies and have a portfolio value
of at least $ 100,000.00 by the end
of the year.
As your
goals are long - term & objective is to accumulate wealth / corpus, kindly opt
for Growth option instead
of Dividend.
For long - term
goals like retirement,
dividend and growth funds or a balanced portfolio
of ETFs make sense.
I personally believe this is a poor
dividend investing strategy as my
goal is always to aim
for quality; it is easier to figure out how to distribute the
dividends across time
for myself than to deal with the capital loss
of having bought a company which turns out to be a lemon and cuts its
dividend.
Finally, my
dividend goals for 2016 are to receive at least $ 1000 worth
of dividends in my Empire portfolio and $ 3000 in my Retirement portfolio.
which means I was thinking some things correctly Every month
of new
dividends flowing in gets me closer to my
goals and motivates me to get every dollar working hard
for my freedom.
Each one
of these small purchases brings me closer to my $ 500
dividend income
goal for 2015 — it's gonna be a close one!
Set a number
for your targeted monthly
dividend income and with each month you will become closer to reaching your
goal of living off
of dividend income.
For me a downturn is a good time to reaffirm my long term
goal of a sustainable monthly
dividend income and market volatility doesn't change that.
My
dividend goals for 2016 are to receive at least $ 1000 worth
of dividends in my Empire portfolio and $ 3000 in my Retirement portfolio.
The net payout yield
goal for the strategy is 8 %, defined by the amount a company spends on stock buybacks and
dividends as a percentage
of its stock price (adjusted
for the amount a company receives
for issuing new stock).
With regular purchases throughout the remainder
of 2013, I should be able to easily raise the annual
dividend amount past my
goal of $ 1,000
for the year 2013.
I am behind on my investment
goal for the year and because
of that, I am behind on the
dividends received and projected
dividends goal.
Given that another
dividend payment by my largest holding Royal Dutch Shell and some
of my interest - bearing positions are still due at the end
of the year, I'm now somehow optimistic that I can reach my income
goal for 2017.
This is because the
goal of every
dividend investor is to generate a stream
of income from their capital, that will pay
for their expenses in retirement.
Simply going to the high end
of the Morningstar
Dividend Investor newsletter's growth rate
goals is enough to compensate
for an increase in inflation from 3 % to 5 %.
For example, if your
goal is to have an annual
dividend income
of $ 35,000 and your
dividend stock portfolio has an average yield
of 3.5 %, then you will need $ 1,000,000 in capital to attain that income
goal.
Because
of two remaining
dividend payments
of my biggest holding Royal Dutch Shell and the scheduled purchase
of another high
dividend stock, I haven't given up hope yet to still reach my
goal for 2017.
Our
goal is to make these types
of stocks more accessible to the investment community by breaking them down into lists that make it easy to identify the right type
of dividend stocks
for each individual.
However, given the two outstanding
dividend payments
of my largest holding Royal Dutch Shell in September and December, I'm somewhat optimistic that I can still reach my
goal for 2017.
I'd setup a
goal of earning $ 12000.00 in total passive
dividend income
for this year and received total
of $ 10225.63 so far.
I'd setup a
goal of earning $ 12000.00 in total passive
dividend income
for this year and received total
of $ 11699.46 so far this year: almost close to the target.
In order to reach my
dividend income
goal, I have to receive minimum $ 1010
dividend for the month
of December.
This shibboleth ignores two obvious factors
of key importance in corporate finance: wealth creation is the primary
goal for most participants in investment processes; and control (not
dividends) is the sine qua non
for acquirers
of common stocks who don't happen to be OPMI's.
Why hold something indefinitely
for the sake
of future
dividend income if the company doesn't hold long - term
dividend growth as a principle
goal?
I realize that I need to set
goals for myself and create steps in order to get to my overall
goal of living solely off my
dividend income.
If catching a falling knife means I'm that much closer to my
goal of living off
of dividend income, then I'm all
for it.
I think Mr. Money Mustache invests in index funds, but he's still a good role model
for early retirement which is usually the
goal of dividend growth investors such as myself!
Glad to see you hitting your
goal and we've still got plenty
of time left in the year
for more
dividend increases to be announced!
Dear Nilesh, If you are planning
for long - term
goals, suggest you to opt
for Growth option instead
of Dividend payouts
of MF schemes.
This occurs when the fund manager drifts off course from the fund's stated investment
goals and strategy in such a way that the composition
of the fund's portfolio changes significantly from its original
goals;
for example, it may shift from being a fund that invests in large - cap stocks that pay above - average
dividends to being a fund mainly invested in small - cap stocks that offer little or no
dividends at all.
The main
goal is to illustrate a realtime example
of dividend growth investing in action, not to provide a template
for people to copy exactly.
Let's assume I pose the following set
of facts: 1) I need to plan
for a 60 year retirement, 2) I want to have at the end
of Year 60 100 %
of my original balance (inflation adjusted obviously), 3) Only 10 %
of my savings / investments is in tax deferred accounts (e.g., the bulk are in a taxable accounts), 4) I need a 6 % withdrawal rate pre-tax, and 5) I am indifferent to strategy (VII, etc) and asset choices (annuity vs.
dividend blend vs. income, etc) but to guarantee the
goals above.
Below I will report my
dividend income
for September and my progress towards reaching my
dividend related
goals for both
of these portfolios.
I will not reach my
goal of $ 100
dividend income
for the year but it pushes it that much closer.
I am in my early 30's and
for three years I have been investing in
dividend stocks with the
goal to generate enough passive income to reach financial independence at the age
of 40.
In fact, if I could average this amount
for each month
for the remainder
of the year, I'd have no trouble surpassing my forward
dividend income
goal for 2018 with just this and my monthly reinvested
dividends (no more capital investment required!).
At the beginning
of the year I can already see, that I will surely over-achieve the passive income
goal I set
for the whole year (USD 5» 500 in
dividends and USD 500 in received interest payments).