For industrials, GWW is a dividend champion with a lower yield but
very high dividend growth.
I wouldn't focus so much on the low current yield of these companies as much as
their very high dividend growth rates.
Not exact matches
The disadvantage is that since the
dividend growth rate already takes into account company
growth and share repurchases, the
growth rate will be fairly
high, so we'll have to use a fairly
high discount rate, and so it's
very sensitive to the inputs.
As such,
dividend growth in the next few years certainly won't match that last few, but I'm
very content with that given the exceedingly
high current yield, my
high confidence in Textainer to ride the storm through to better times, and ultra-safe P / E and reasonable payout ratio.
As you can see many of the stocks mentioned may have
high current PE's but also feature long to
very long
dividend histories with relatively
high ten year annualized
dividend growth rates at around or better than 10 %.
In general, I think most long term
dividend growth investors follow a
very similar methodology, though I suspect some first timers get lured by the
high yield stocks initially only to get burned down the road with
dividend cuts or eliminations.
Abbot Labs
dividend growth is what made Grace Groner a
very wealthy woman not its
high current yield.
Diversification is important here, as
high - yield ETFs can react
very differently than
dividend -
growth ETFs to changes in bond yields or to Fed policy.
By its
very nature a «10 % Trade» is designed to generate extra income from
high - quality
dividend growth stocks.
When considering the profile of companies which pay
dividends, those that tend to have initially
high yields (think +7 %),
very few can be considered true
dividend growth companies.
The ten - year
dividend growth rate stands at 10.9 %, so you're getting a
very high DGR on a
very high yield.
Very good long - term
dividend track record and
high quality company... pretty popular with
dividend growth investors and a bit beaten up right now.
We're calling these groups the good (
dividend paying moderate to moderately
high growth), the great (
very fast
growth no
dividend) and the ugly (lousy earnings records mostly no
dividends).
When
very exciting and dynamic
high quality companies are in the sweet spot of their
growth phases, they rarely pay
dividends.
Then
growth slows but revenue is still
very high which normally results in a
dividend payment.
As a value investor, I must admit to being
very frustrated with the valuations I'm seeing on
high - quality blue - chip
dividend growth stocks.
Combine a
very high initial yield
dividend payer from a quality company with a company featuring fast
dividend growth.
If only there was a way to get the best of both worlds today... to purchase both a
high - quality
dividend growth stock today AND collect a double - digit annual income stream from those
very same shares over the next 12 months.
As IH commented above, we also share no names in common for the month but I guess that's to be expected considering the manner in which you are investing going after the
very high current yield instead of just
dividend growth.
The fundamentals are
high quality across the board, the
dividend metrics are
very appealing, and the future
growth potential looks
very strong.
I know you (& everyone) want to be officially FI as soon as possible, and it's easier to get there with 3 % -4 % yielders, but I think it's
very smart to mix in
high dividend -
growth stocks as well even if the current yield is unsatisfying.
The major reason I wanted to buy UNS it
very good 12 - 14 %
dividend growth, If I'd buy it than, probably I would sell it too, because suddenly
dividend growth went down to 2 %... another prove that current yield is more important that hoping of consistent
higher dividend growth....
Many income investors focus on
dividend growth over current yield since a
very high yield is often a sign of a future
dividend decrease or lack of
growth, whereas a long trend of sustained increases forces capital appreciation as well as the market continues to adjust for an ever - increasing
dividend payout.
I came out
high — and that was even with a
very conservative look at future
dividend growth.
However, it's getting
very difficult to find attractively valued blue - chips that can provide that kind of income while simultaneously offering Read more about Eaton Corporation A
High - Yield
Dividend Growth Opportunity -LSB-...]
CA has a low payout ratio (note; it will increase due to the huge
dividend growth in 2012) combined with a
very high margin (28 - 29 %) is a great combination for any
dividend growth stock.
For example, two of the companies labeled in the figure, Lowe's (NYSE: LOW) and McDonald's (NYSE: MCD), had past DGRs from 1991 to 2001 in the 8 - 10 % range, but then had aggressive
dividend growth from 2001 to 2011 that resulted in
very high future DGRs above 25 %.
I am particularily pleased about several
very high dividend hikes that contributed to that strong passive income
growth (just have a look at the list with businesses in my portfolio that increase their payouts in my previous post).
Returning to Australia... The Australian banks are an excellent group of companies that: (i) are domiciled in a country with
very high GDP per capita with excellent / extremely consistent economic performance (
high GDP
growth / last recession in 1991); (ii) have mid-teens ROE, near the top globally among developed economies; (iii) retain some of the
highest capital ratios in the world (~ 15 % CET1 ratios, vs. Canadian banks at ~ 11 %); and finally (iv) have
very high and reliable
dividend yields (between 7 - 9 %, generally).
On the top of the market in 2007, Gordon Equation suggested negative returns due 1 %
dividend yield, 0 % earning
growth (that is what John Bogle said), and possible decrease in P / E ratio (S&P 500 had a P / E ratio of 25 at that time,
very high in comparison with a historic average of 15.)
Despite the risks, some companies do a
very good job of paying a
high dividend yield and still protecting future
growth.
for you would a stock like duke energy (DUK) not be attractive to you because of its payout % being so
high 116 % even thou it is a
very stable
growth company 10 years
dividend growth!
The company ranks
very highly using The 8 Rules of
Dividend Investing thanks to its extremely high dividend yield, solid growth rate, fairly low payout ratio, and long dividend
Dividend Investing thanks to its extremely
high dividend yield, solid growth rate, fairly low payout ratio, and long dividend
dividend yield, solid
growth rate, fairly low payout ratio, and long
dividend dividend history.