Screen by dividend yield, ex-dividend date and more.
Screen by dividend yield, industry, All - Star Ranking and more.
For example, I recently sorted my stock
screen by dividend yield and I got Provident Financial and Capita at the top, with dividend yields of 20 % and 17 % respectively.
Not exact matches
Screening stocks
by dividend yield often works, but the «dogs of the TSX» strategy can have a nasty bite
For this
screen, we start
by looking for stocks with a
dividend yield north of 2.5 %.
Among emerging market stocks, results with rule - based
screening were even higher — when these
screens were applied, the EM High
Dividend Yield Index outperformed its benchmark
by 5.1 points in our simulation.
The minimum
dividend yield required
by the Rea - Graham
screen is currently 2 % (66.7 % of the corporate bond rate of 3 %).
It is a conditioning
screen for the
dividend yield scan because,
by itself, it does not indicate if the
dividend yield is high or low, nor will it indicate if the stock is priced attractively.
The Index construction process looks beyond just
yield and analyzes the financial health of a company and its ability to maintain
dividend increases
by including a blend of historical and forward looking factors to
screen for high quality
dividend - growers.
Given the declining
yields in US equities and continued thirst for
dividends by investors, I decided to run a
screen over at Finviz.com to see if I could come up with any potential high
yield candidates.
September 2010
by Charles Rotblut This AAII.com
screen identifies stocks with
yields that are above their historical averages and that have histories of rising
dividend payments.
April 2004
by John Bajkowski A review of the Geraldine Weiss
screen to identify sound companies trading at reasonable
dividend yield valuation levels.
To help home in on funds with decent
dividend yields, start
by screening for diversified domestic - equity funds with
dividend yields that are at least as high as the S&P 500's trailing -12-month
yield of roughly 2 %.
Other stocks at the top of a pure
yield screen might include companies about to cut the
dividend since their payout ratio can not be sustained
by the earnings.
The current average
dividend yield of the Dogs of the Dow
screen is 3.9 %; this means shareholders of these stocks would actually have an annual return that is higher
by approximately this amount.
The Index
screens for companies that have consistently increased their
dividend for at least 20 consecutive years, and weights the stocks
by yield