Sentences with phrase «not raise the dividend this year»

In addition, OHI's management has announced that they will not raise the dividend this year (thus stopping their streak of raising the dividend by $.01 / quarter).
If you were assembling a portfolio of dividend payers today, would you ignore the yields of CIBC (5 %) and BMO (4.8 %) simply because they haven't raised their dividends every year since 2005?

Not exact matches

Companies which not only pay dividends, but raise them year after year have been shown to perform better overall for investor returns.
This creates an interesting situation where this list doesn't pick up companies for example that have been raising the dividend for 5 fiscal years but not 5 calendar years.
A company doesn't have to raise its dividend every year but it should continue to pay them.
Yet, 3M didn't disappoint income investors — it raised its dividend by a good 16 % and for the 60th straight year in 2017, returning $ 2.8 billion of its FCF in dividends.
As we all know, dividends, no matter how reliable and dependable, no matter how long they have been paid out, no matter how many years of consecutive raises are given are not guaranteed.
The portfolio annual income grew 4.89 % over the course of the year and this does not even reflect dividend raises announced that would not take effect until Q1 2018.
That is not because JNJ has not been raising its dividend, it is because JNJ's price has risen rapidly for the past couple of years.
The same savings rate as last year would double the dividend income, and that's not including the dividend raises from companies I already own.
Today, we're going to take a look at Dividend Achievers — companies with a history of raising their annual dividends for a minimum of 10 consecutive years — that aren't just providing token upticks.
Not only did it consistently pay dividends, it actually raised the dividend every years.
There aren't many retailers who have raised their dividend for more than 50 years in a row, but Lowe's Companies -LSB-...]
There aren't many retailers who have raised their dividend for more than 50 years in a row, but Lowe's Companies (LOW) has managed to do just that.
Not only has Nucor never missed a dividend payment, but it has consistently raised it for 35 years until the depression of the steel industry from late 2008 until late 2009.
I wonder if XOM is going to maintain dividends, and if CVX will slide down the list now that they didn't raise dividends yet this year.
According to Bloomberg, 18 of the 57 U.S. pipeline operators that haven't declared bankruptcy have cut their dividends or stopped raising them in the last year.
A company can now qualify for the Aristocrats index even if it does not raise its dividend for five consecutive years: it is permitted to «maintain the same dividend for a maximum of two consecutive years within that five year period.»]
With her preference to pay herself dividends from her business, which do not qualify for Canada Pension Plan benefits, it makes little sense to raise her final payout just to add a year to salary, pay tax and obtain income for filling up her small RRSP space.
Not only have all seven high - yield stock on this list been paying a dividend for 25 years, they have also been raising their dividend 25 consecutive years.
Nothing is guaranteed, but if you went out today and bought a basket of quality stocks, you would be almost 99 % sure that your investment would be performing 10, 20, 30 years later... Not only that, you would be expecting dividend pay raises in the process.
It is not a difficult prediction: Fortis has raised dividends every year for close to half a century.
In the same way most people don't understand that a latte every day adds up to a lot of extra expenses over the year, they would miss the entire concept of these «small» dividend raises and how much fresh capital it would take to achieve those same amounts.
Do you own stock from any companies that normally raise their dividends during the first quarter but did not this year?
The next three years there I will not assume any dividend growth because the company might choose to lower its debt instead of raising its dividends.
Filed Under: Angry Retail Rants, Bank Rants Tagged With: a year isn't always a year, angry banker, angry retail banker, average salary, dividend mantra, early retirement, faux paus, financial freedom, jason feiber, licensed banker, median salary, negotatiing salary, pay raise, position, promotion, retail banker, retail banking
Other companies pay twice annually, or on other schedules, or don't necessarily raise their dividends each year.
For 68 consecutive quarters, HCP had raised its dividend, but that changed earlier this year when HCP announced it would not increase its common dividend for the first quarter.
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