The concept is that some stocks tend to be typically undervalued, have slower growing stock prices, and
usually higher dividend yields.
Not exact matches
Their
dividends are
usually qualified
dividends, which get taxed at a lower tax rate, their
yield is
usually higher than common stock
yields, and they may provide less share price volatility.
O's
dividend growth rate is
usually average for a
high -
yield stock (around 5 %) or slow.
He also found that stocks with moderate to
higher dividend yields tend to be less volatile, which means they
usually provide investors with fewer sleepless nights.
Usually stocks that have a
yield this
high are in the midst of a steady decline and may possibly be facing a
dividend cut.
As would be expected, the
Dividend Aristocrats have not usually paid high dividend
Dividend Aristocrats have not
usually paid
high dividenddividend yields.
In fact, one reason many companies have overly
high yields is because the stock price has fallen significantly,
usually due to a loss in future earnings power, and this means the
yield has moved up, but only temporarily, as the market is pricing in a
dividend cut.
Yeah those
dividend payments are nice and
usually high yield.
The
highest dividend stocks in the market are
usually yielding so much because they're very
high risk — many of the energy stocks that offered double - digit
yields at some time in the last year have since reduced or eliminated their
dividends, for example.
Furthermore due to regulatory risk and a desire for acquisitions a
dividend may not be sustainable and as we know stocks trading at
high dividend yields are
usually expressing such.
Don't
higher dividends usually drive stock prices
higher as people with the short - term perspective of investing for
yield pile into them?
Usually when people start out
dividend investing they buy many dangerously
high yielding stocks only to get burned when a cut or elimination occurs.
Dividend Aristocrats are usually not the S&P 500 stocks with the highest dividen
Dividend Aristocrats are
usually not the S&P 500 stocks with the
highest dividenddividend yield.
I don't consider
high dividend yields a catalyst either; they're
usually just a function of a depressed share price.
MLPs tend to offer
higher yields than REITs or other
dividend stocks,
usually around a range of between 5 % and 7 % a year.
Baa - rated bond
yields have typically been about 130 basis points
higher than equity REIT
dividend yields, and the spread between them has
usually been between 80 and 180 basis points.