When dividends are reinvested automatically, the funds are routed back
into purchasing more shares of the companies that issued the dividends.
Not exact matches
I always get a lot of questions about where to
purchase the outfits I
share so we've added shopping links
into our posts
more regularly.
Now, nearly two years later, I've amassed a considerable amount of knowledge about the pros and cons of what I chose to do, and wanted to
share it with other burgeoning authors, or even
more experienced ones like me, who may be debating whether to dive
into the
purchased - ISBN pool now for their third or fourth books, on whether it's worth the money or not.
The publisher and the author sell
more units making the same on each unit as they do on hard cover and the reader gets a price that takes
into consideration that he has
purchased ONLY intellectual property and has NOTHING concrete to line their shelves or
share.
At its dividend rate of $ 0.26 per
share per quarter, or $ 1.04 per year, that works out to about $ 33
more per year in dividends that will be flowing
into my portfolio as a result of this
purchase.
With a dividend reinvestment plan, they will have
more shares to sell than they started with, but without having to have put
more funds
into purchasing stocks.
Their USD dividend payments are first converted
into CAD, then their CAD are converted back
into USD and only then are the dividends used to
purchase more shares.
If you chose instead to reinvest your dividends
into GlaxoSmithKline, then every 100
shares you bought would have generated a total of a bit
more than $ 1,500 that got reinvested at a
purchase price of around $ 41 per
share, so that every 100
shares would have created 36 - 37 new
shares organically since 2008.
However, if Netflix merges
into another company, or an acquring company merges
into Netflix, or Netflix decides to sell
more than half of its assets, each right will also be activated, allowing the holder to
purchase shares as described above.
I'll have to do some
more research but
purchasing smaller
shares of larger deals seems like a great way to get
into commercial without huge upfront costs.
To win the bid, Macdonald Hotels entered
into a joint venture with Bank of Scotland that gives the bank the option to
purchase more than 3 million new
shares of the company at a price of 167 pence per
share.