They don't just list the companies but also order them into the categories and add some very useful values
like dividend growth rate, yield or payout ratio.
They don't just list the companies but also order them into the categories and add some very useful values
like dividend growth rate, yield or payout ratio.
Not exact matches
As my horizon is 20 - 30 years I do not mind adding some low yielders
like $ DAL or $ ACN in there, as long as the
dividend growth rate is substantial.
While the company's five consecutive years of
dividend increases is a bit shorter of a track record than I'd typically
like to see, the
dividend growth has been tremendous: the stock's three - year
dividend growth rate is sitting at 44.2 %.
In buying stocks I try to maintain a balance between high yielders (such as most REITS) and low yielders with above average
dividend growth rates (stock
like SBUX, DAL).
The current yield of 1.55 % might not be massive
like AT&T's
dividend (which is why we diversify, and it's why I'm listing 10 different stocks with different dynamics here), but Walt Disney more than makes up for that via strong
dividend growth: the five - year
dividend growth rate is 30.1 %, which is one of the higher
rates you'll run across.
Pre-Retirement Portfolio -
Like the post-retirement portfolio the pre-retirement portfolio easily beat our income benchmarks with an ending yield of 4.2 % and
dividend growth rate of 5.82 %.
Like CVX, MMM has an amazing twenty five year annualized
dividend growth rate of 6.47 %.
My problem is that when i look for stocks i set very strict parameter rules
like: — minimum
dividend growth rate of 7 - 10 % in last years 10, 5 years average — historical stocks that increased
dividend at least for the last 15 years or paid historically (
like BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA)-- very low debt — low payout ratio — historically (long term) stock price has been increasing etc...
While the company's five consecutive years of
dividend increases is a bit shorter of a track record than I'd typically
like to see, the
dividend growth has been tremendous: the stock's three - year
dividend growth rate is sitting at 44.2 %.
The current yield of 1.55 % might not be massive
like AT&T's
dividend (which is why we diversify, and it's why I'm listing 10 different stocks with different dynamics here), but Walt Disney more than makes up for that via strong
dividend growth: the five - year
dividend growth rate is 30.1 %, which is one of the higher
rates you'll run across.
To illustrate the interplay between yield and
dividend growth rate, I
like to use the calculator at Miller / Howard Investments.
As such I
like to look at rolling
dividend growth rates to get a better idea of the
dividend growth over longer periods of time.
This interest is actually a
dividend from the life insurance company's yearly profits, and the
growth rate is generally low compared to other investments because life insurance companies have additional expenses (
like policy administration expenses and underwriting costs) that a pure asset manager does not.
The long - term
growth rate has been something
like 12 % a year and the current
dividend yield is just below 5 %.