In addition, this stylistic diversification affords the ability to construct a portfolio with a total return profile driven by dividend growth,
supported by dividend yield, and exposed to capital appreciation potential.
Not exact matches
The High
Yield Dividend Newsletter portfolio seeks to find some of the highest -
yielding stocks
supported by strong credit profiles and solid business models, but not always robust traditional free cash flow.
Steve Symington (Verizon): With an annual
dividend yield of 4.8 %,
supported by its status as the largest wireless carrier in the U.S., I think investors would do well to pick up shares of Verizon today.
IBM does have a nice
dividend yield supported by 22 consecutive years of increases.
While the
dividend yield is currently a low 1.7 % we expect this to continue growing in the coming years,
supported by a strong balance sheet and growing FCF and earnings.
In addition, this stylistic diversification affords the ability to construct a portfolio with a total return profile driven
by dividend yield,
supported by dividend growth, and exposed to capital appreciation potential.
• Solid
dividend, at 2.5 %
yield, that has been raised 45 straight years and is
supported by low payout ratios and strong
dividend safety.
As displayed in Exhibit 2, the portfolio's 3.57 % average
dividend yield was
supported by a 9.5 % average free cash flow
yield, compared with the benchmark's 1.99 % average
dividend yield funded
by 4.87 % average free cash flow
yield over the sampled history.
For example, a company with a high
dividend yield and low
dividend payout ratio (or high
dividend coverage ratio) indicates that the company's
dividend yield is
supported by its strong earnings.
In a benign regulatory environment, the Australian banking sector can represent a very attractive risk / reward if it can produce 3 - 4 % EPS growth
supported by 7 - 9 %
dividend yields.