And I don't consider the recent NAV discount swing cause for alarm — experienced investors should be used to a 10 - 20 % premium / discount appearing on a regular basis, presuming underlying NAV looks realistic (which it does, based
on current yield / other metrics).
Rather than focusing
on current yield, the ETF instead looks at stocks that have a past history of dividend growth over time.
I have actually focused more on dividend / earnings growth and less
on current yield as I have gotten older.
This first top 10 list is offered for dividend growth investors that are most focused
on current yield.
Dividend oriented investors often focus too much
on current yield (i.e. how much the company pays the investor today), which, by extension, leads to a portfolio of mature slower growth businesses like regulated utilities or telecommunications service companies.
For G&D, values for stockholders are created by earnings which are then valued in the market by a price earnings ratio (or capitalization rate) and / or dividends, which are valued by the market
on a current yield basis.
Investors seeking income solely based
on current yield (with some asset class diversification mixed in) could consider these myriad higher yielding ETFs herein.
When building a solid, long - term income portfolio, you can not make your investment decisions based
on current yield alone.
For this reason, some investors instead choose to focus
on current yield when comparing the dividends of different stocks.
Estimate expected return (for next month) for each bond based
on current yield SMAs and expected yield SMA betas.
Investors seeking income solely based
on current yield (with some asset class diversification mixed in) could consider these myriad higher yielding ETFs herein.
-LSB-...] the long - term returns on bonds will certainly be lower than average based
on the current yields.
Not exact matches
Higher U.S.
yields can put pressure
on the currencies of emerging market countries that run
current account deficits such as Indonesia and India, said Satoshi Okagawa, senior global markets analyst for Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation in Singapore.
The
current deadlock has raised pressure
on Greek bonds
on Thursday morning, sending the 10 - year bond
yields up by 5 basis point.
Southwest said
on Wednesday that «while
current trends suggest a stabilization of close - in fares, the overall revenue
yield environment remains soft.»
Another suggestion would be to use industry reports that are
current, and not to use
yield analyis that was done
on wild grown trees instead of domestic plantation grown trees, pampered and bred for their
yield.
By the way, the duration of the five - year 5 % bond (using a
current yield of 3 % and semi-annual compounding) is 4.68 years (calculated
on my spreadsheet).
The average
yield on the 10 - year Treasury note over the past 30 years is 4.834 percent, still well above
current levels.
Indeed, Randell Moore, who survey's economists as the editor of the Blue Economic Indicators, says the
current consensus is for the
yield on the 10 - year Treasury bond to rise to 3.25 % by the end of 2015.
the percentage of return an investor receives based
on the amount invested or
on the
current market value of holdings; it is expressed as an annual percentage rate;
yield stated is the
yield to worst — the
yield if the worst possible bond repayment takes place, reflecting the lower of the
yield to maturity or the
yield to call based
on the previous close
The
current dividend
yield on XRE is about 5.25 % and about 4.90 %
on CPD and their total year - to - date return is 8.76 % and 1.92 %.
I want to share the
current state of my dividend portfolio, related to market value, forward - looking dividends,
yield and
yield on cost.
However, income calculations for the
current month and until the end of the year are hypothetical calculations and based
on the
yield type you selected.
Yet even if companies were to suddenly boost dividends back to their historical norm of 52 % of earnings, and even if
current earnings figures were reliable, the dividend
yield on the S&P 500 would still be under 1.9 %, less than half the historical norm.
What's actually true is that
yield - seeking speculation in response to quantitative easing and zero - interest rate policies has elevated
current valuations, giving investors returns (at least
on paper) that they would have waited many more years to accrue.
The
yield on the
current 30 - year bond fell less than one basis point to 3.37 percent.
Y represents the
current yield on AAA corporate bonds.
It seeks (1) to provide a level of
current income that exceeds the average
yield on U.S. stocks generally and (2) to provide a growing stream of income over the years.
Based
on current cash flow you can expect this high
yield stock to continue paying these generous dividends.
On a side note, I really would love to add to my consumer staples but not at
current valuations and
yield.
The
current yield on all fixed income securities — and specifically the general
yield of the junk market — does not in any way price in liquidity risk (aka a «liquidity premium»).
The SEC
yield reflects the rate at which the fund is earning income
on its
current portfolio of securities while the distribution rate reflects the fund's past dividends paid to shareholders.
The article I wrote focused
on high
current yield at 4 % +.
Our Investment Strategy Report published
on March 19 compared equity and bond
yields over multiple business cycles and found that the 10 - year Treasury
yield might have to sustain levels exceeding 3.5 % (far above what we believe is likely this year) before compelling a year - end 2018 S&P 500 Index target range below our
current year - end target of 2800 - 2900.2
In order to drive the long - term return
on stocks even 1 % higher, the market would have to plunge over 40 % (this would drive the
yield on stocks from the
current 1.4 % to 2.4 %).
Based
on the above research findings, with the S&P 500 Index's
current ten - year normalized PE of 20.3 and ten - year normalized dividend
yield of 2.1 %, investors should be aware of the fact that the market is by historical standards expensive.
Focus
on Value: By targeting high -
yielding securities at significant discounts to their intrinsic values, we attempt to generate capital appreciation
on top of high
current income.
With fundamental results coming in largely as expected during the year, we believe the stock price decline was primarily due to industry and market pressures
on its peer group, and we believe the
current high free cash flow
yield makes the stock an attractive investment.
Without the Federal Reserve's intervention, Mr. Paulsen says, the 10 - year Treasury
yield would be in the vicinity of 4 percent based
on current levels of economic growth, core inflation and wage growth.
The former also pays a relatively higher dividend; its upcoming quarterly payout
yields nearly 2 %
on the
current share price, higher than AmEx's 1.5 %.
Higher oil prices would reinforce
current market trends based
on reflation: rising long - term bond
yields and a shift out of perceived safer assets — bond proxies and low - volatility stocks — and into cyclical assets such as EM.
Coupling that lower valuation
on the company's earnings with the much higher
current yield leads to a lot of upside, along with what could be more near - term and long - term income from the stock.
As usual, I don't place too much emphasis
on this sort of forecast, but to the extent that I make any comments at all about the outlook for 2006, the bottom line is this: 1) we can't rule out modest potential for stock appreciation, which would require the maintenance or expansion of already high price / peak earnings multiples; 2) we also should recognize an uncomfortably large potential for market losses, particularly given that the
current bull market has now outlived the median and average bull, yet at higher valuations than most bulls have achieved, a flat
yield curve with rising interest rate pressures, an extended period of internal divergence as measured by breadth and other market action, and complacency at best and excessive bullishness at worst, as measured by various sentiment indicators; 3) there is a moderate but still not compelling risk of an oncoming recession, which would become more of a factor if we observe a substantial widening of credit spreads and weakness in the ISM Purchasing Managers Index in the months ahead, and; 4) there remains substantial potential for U.S. dollar weakness coupled with «unexpectedly» persistent inflation pressures, particularly if we do observe economic weakness.
US markets are
on a tear but our James Swanson thinks the
current rally may not be sustainable amid pricey valuations and contracting dividend
yields.
If the
current dividend
yield is stable through the years and there is dividend growth, this also implies that
on top of receiving more dividend income, your holding has also grown in value.
The
current yield on a 10 - year U.S. bond stands at less than 2.5 %.
The pre-tax profit from Google's core business returns a 6.5 % earnings
yield on its
current market valuation.
7 - day
Current Yield reflects the interest income per share a money market fund earned
on its investments for the last 7 days (annualized).
If I assume a dividend growth rate of 6 percent (about the long - run average *), the
current S&P 500 dividend
yield of 2.1 percent (from multpl.com), a terminal S&P 500 dividend
yield of 4 percent (Hussman says that the dividend
yield on stocks has historically averaged about 4 percent), the expected nominal return over ten years is 2.4 percent annually.
Stripping away Alphabet's «Other Bets» collection of emerging businesses, the pre-tax profit from Google's core business returns a 6.5 % earnings
yield on its
current market valuation (after adjusting for its massive cash balance).