Sentences with phrase «half decent dividend»

Add decent dividends to the mix and this is a business you should want to hold in volatile markets.
These five tech companies provide some decent dividend yields.
The valuation is neither entirely unreasonable nor unusually appealing, but compared to the fairly high valuation of the market currently, it may make a good choice for a stock with a decent dividend yield (3.43 %) and consistent dividend growth history.
As growth slowed from the heady days of the 90's, they also became pretty decent dividend growth stocks.
The company pays a decent dividend and has grown its dividend.
Of note is the purchase of shares in companies that pay decent dividends and provide products that the couple use and see being around for 20 years.
Beat the market with the best dividend stocks that will not only bring your portfolio double and triple - digit winners, but also provide a decent dividend to increase your overall returns.
Unlike the old days when you bought emerging markets purely for rapid growth, you can now count on growth and decent dividend income.
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.
I made some decent dividend income in July but I'm very disappointed in my lack of buying activity.
A low dividend yield could indicate a high share price, due to positive growth prospects, or it could mean the company can't afford to pay a decent dividend.
February was another month of decent dividend income.
• It has a decent yield (3 %) and decent dividend growth rate (7 % per year).
I find it odd that you'll invest in their preference / preferred investment shares for the sake of decent dividend return (though not guaranteed as they are almost always non-cumulative, meaning where no dividend is declared by the Board, they are not obligated for any missed dividend payments).
Unless having cash is an option, you have to look for relative defensive stocks and decent dividends.
I had 15 shares in TD but they split last year and I am now the happy owner of 30 shares of TD that are increasing in price and paying a decent dividend.
The company's reasonable AFFO payout ratio (75 %) is also supportive of decent dividend growth, especially considering the low amount of sustaining capital expenditures required by the business (i.e. if Crown Castle cut back on growth investments, its AFFO payout ratio would drop and provide even more room for dividend increases).
This means fairly reliable revenues and consistent cash flows for consumer - staples companies that help fund decent dividends.
Unless you have a phat stash of cash to start with and feel comfortable going «all in» with that money, then it will take some time (see item 1 above) for your portfolio to grow large enough to realize decent dividend payouts.
These companies all have decent dividend yields and have grown dividends for a long time.
Many of these pay decent dividends, and many of them will benefit from the tax bill.
As growth slowed from the heady days of the 90's, they also became pretty decent dividend growth stocks.
This means consistent sales, ability for the company to pay a decent dividend and (hopefully for shareholders) a steady share price no matter the investing environment.
Waiting may result in missing a quality entry point or missing a decent dividend which after tax results in more than the yield of the stock.
Presumably, shareholders of a dividend stock like the fact that it pays a decent dividend, and a low ratio gives confidence that the dividend won't be reduced (and / or likely to be increased in the future).
On the other hand, I'd get to buy a decent dividend growth stock at a 6.5 % discount to what it was trading for yesterday.
If 3M can even convert half its profits into FCF, investors can expect decent dividend growth, considering that 3M has paid out at least 40 % of FCF in dividends in the past five years.
A shareholder friendly management team, which buys back shares and pay a decent dividend.
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 %.
I must admit that this time I was looking for high yielding stocks, closer to 10 % yield with a decent dividend growth and dividend paying history.
Lets look at a different stock that also provides some decent dividend growth and illustrate the effects of how a dividend growth rate can affect your income.
I'm looking for companies that are fairly valued, have a decent dividend yield (3 % to 6 %) and have a fairly long history of paying dividends consistently for 10 years or more.
Has there been a historical decent dividend policy or share buyback programmes in place?
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.

Not exact matches

However «dividends, even at a two percent level, is a decent return and you have a tax advantage.»
In a decent year, it would pay around $ 400 million in dividends to its shareholders.
To even earn a decent return, you'd have to overcome not only dividend and capital gains taxes, but also the 2 % to 2.25 % fees that hit you up from the very first moment you open an account.
They also have a decent track record of dividend increases — the growth from $ 0.35 in 2011 to $ 0.47 in 2015 represents a CAGR of 6 %, well outpacing the rate of inflation.
The 5 year dividend growth comes to 8.45 %, which is again decent.
The company has strong brands, decent diversification, and a long history of consecutive annual dividend growth stretching back to the 1970's.
• 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.
The valuation was decent (I paid around 15x earnings) and the stock sported a succulent 6 % dividend yield.
JCI is a solid long term dividend paying industrial that has been lagging a bit post it's Adient plc (ADNT) spin off and continues to look decent to me at current levels.
Thank you, it has been a huge time saver for us and the returns and dividend increases have been very decent.
These are quite decent returns so far (I don't even factor in the book gain or dividend (re --RRB- investments).
Can an investment in a solid and attractive — but «maturing» — company deliver decent returns despite slowing dividend growth?
It also provides a decent measure of current income, with a dividend yield of 2.2 %, versus a median of 2.0 % for all dividend paying equities in the Value Line universe.
In the past, I've stuck more with consumer cyclical companies that pay a decent and continuously growing dividend since one can argue a recession may not have as much as an effect (we'll always need toothpaste, I think).
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