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As such
if you hold a stock like this, you might have to wait until other investors see the fundamentals as you saw them and change their attitude regarding the concern that is keeping this stock back.
However, dividends are treated differently:
If you hold the stock for at least 60 days during the 121 - day period that begins 60 days before the ex-dividend date and ends 60 days after the ex-dividend date, your dividend counts as long - term capital gains.
If you hold the stock for 10 years then the commission is amortized over those 10 years and you've effectively paid a.035 % yearly expense ratio, which is significantly below any of the funds listed above.
And
if he holds the stock, taxation of that initial discount can be deferred until he sells the stock, perhaps indefinitely?
But it just means that he would not have produced anywhere near the results he did
if he held his stocks «forever», or for 10 years instead of 4, etc...
In the end, you'll need to decide
if holding a stock that can have only a small impact on your finances is worth your time.
Now,
if we hold the stock until March 17 and if the stock is unchanged between now and then, we could sell the stock for $ 23.12 and our return would be:
If you hold a stock that grows its dividend payout by 7 % each year, the dividend yield will double in 10 years!
Buy and hold — the strategy based on a theory that
if you hold a stock long enough it will go up in price — refer to the above.
In most cases, however,
if you hold the stocks outside your RRSP, you can get a Canadian income tax credit to offset that tax.
However,
if you hold a stock for more than a year before selling it, the gain is taxed at the lower capital gains rates — 20 percent or less — which can be a big tax saving.
If you hold a stock in a non-registered account, you'll likely pay tax on dividends — even if they are reinvested in additional shares — and you'll also pay capital gains tax when you ultimately sell the shares (assuming they rose in price).
If you hold stock in AVGN, you must cast your vote before that date.
If you hold stock in a company that is not publicly traded, what will happen to that stock if the company becomes publicly traded?
If you hold stocks that are affected by that decrease in price, it might be a good idea to hedge their potential loss of value by buying some inverse oil ETFs such as the 1x United States Short Oil ETF (DNO), or the 2x ProShares UltraShort Bloomberg Crude Oil ETF (SCO).
«
If you hold stocks in your portfolio, hopefully for anything longer than an hour, you know they can move around so you have to be comfortable with this kind of uncertainty and realize that (you buy stocks) because they are a long term call, if you will, on global growth.»
Therefore,
if you hold the stock long enough, you will get aCOP dividend yield of 6 % + on this stock.
In other words,
if you hold a stock for 20 or 30 years it might not matter that you paid a fair price (versus a bargain price) for a stock.
In fact,
if I hold a stock announcing a dividend cut, I will automatically sell it and concentrate on my next trade.
If I hold the stock of an individual company then I have an equity asset.
So, for example,
if you hold stocks worth $ 4.00, your account must be worth at least $ 2.00, which means you can not borrow more than $ 2.00.
If you hold a stock in a company you stand to benefit directly from the activities of the company via dividends or stock buy backs.
For example,
if you hold stocks in an RRSP, RESP or RRIF, you don't pay tax on what you earn while your money is in the plan, but withdrawals are fully taxed as income.
Plus, I should again stress longer holding periods can be a huge advantage (not just in terms of taxes): Generally, the better the company / investment, the longer you end up holding it — and
if you hold a stock for 5 - 7 yrs +, for example, the broker fee to buy & to sell is obviously pretty irrelevant when you «spread» it over the entire period (& far cheaper than the annual / cumulative fees you'd pay on an investment fund).
It's true that those who practiced Dollar - Cost Averaging after the crash are likely to see a good long - term return
if they hold those stocks for at least 10 years.
If you hold stocks for a long time then the odds of benefiting from that positive earnings and dividend trend is pretty high.
An all equity portfolio might be pitched as «diversified»
if it holds stocks across multiple styles (value & growth), market caps (small, mid, & large), and potentially even geography (international & domestic).
If you held stocks for just a couple of years, you definitely found yourself making some money.
Not exact matches
Yet even
if Northern Gateway is doomed, Enbridge
stock has
held up fairly well through 2012.
Stocks are now positive on the year, but
if you're worried about
holding onto your winners, CNBC contributor Dan Nathan has a clever strategy.
This means
if you don't feel comfortable owning a
stock for more than 10 years, you shouldn't
hold it for 10 minutes.
If you need to hunt down the cost basis of some long -
held stocks and your brokerage firm doesn't have that information, you could dig up historical prices and dividend payments to get a sense of your cost basis.
If you bought Imax
stock at its late - 1970s high and
held it to today, you would have lost ground to generalized inflation.
In fact,
if you own a balanced mutual fund, you almost certainly
hold bank
stocks.
And
if you just
held through all of that, your
stock portfolio right now would be about a percent from all - time highs.
Think about it — what
if you
held those hot biotechs and cloud based software
stocks that were so popular at the end of 2013?
«One of the reasons you would want to
hold a concentrated portfolio is
if you have superior information about the
stocks,» he says.
The number of Buy ratings on the
stock — four compared with five
Holds, according to data from Bloomberg — shows analysts have confidence in finances down the road, while others would rather wait and see
if Cott can move past its erratic history.
If, after exercising the option, your executive
holds on to the
stock for a while and it appreciates, she will owe only capital - gains tax on that appreciation when she sells.
«
If it were up to him, he'd risk it and
hold just a handful of
stocks, while I'm consistently trying to get more diversified.»
The system lets associates with hand -
held devices scan an item in store and
if the right size or color isn't in
stock, the employee orders it for the customer via its e-commerce site.
By the way, I'm sure you're wondering: Dr. Zuckerberg reportedly
held the equivalent of about $ 60 million in Facebook
stock at the time of its IPO;
if he
held onto it all, it would be worth about $ 167 million today.
If my capital market expectations are for a good bond market and a weak
stock market in the next year (such as this year), I don't necessarily want to change any of the
stocks or bonds that I
hold.
When a
stock fund in your taxable account trades
stocks, you're on the hook for the capital gains taxes — even
if you did nothing but buy the fund and
hold it.
What
if a cash crunch forced you to sell
stock holdings during one of these painful downturns?
What's more, hedge funds might have trouble justifying their high fees
if they are
holding the same
stocks as a rival.
Stock values would not have
held up
if investors believed the worst - case scenario — failed negotiations that trigger an effective Greek default — would lead to mass panic.
Essentially,
if you want a nice return on your BlackBerry
stock, you're going to have to
hold onto it for a while.
The best course of action is to buy quality
stocks without regard to what the market is doing, and then
hold on for the long haul, even
if your
stocks go down.