If you're a long - term value investor
who focuses on dividend growth this could be an interesting time to lock in great values with attractive yields.
People
who focus on dividend investing tend to ignore ongoing costs.
Brian — I would expect that someone
who focus on dividends for income would have a higher equity allocation than normal.
Not exact matches
There is no doubt that, based
on pure, cold, logical data, stocks are the single best long - term performing asset class for disciplined investors
who are not swayed by emotion,
focus on earnings and
dividends, and never pay too much for a stock, often as measured
on a conservative beginning earnings yield relative to the Treasury bond yield basis.
For investors
who aren't
focused exclusively
on rising
dividend income, the Dividend Aristocrats are still attractive because their total returns have also been very
dividend income, the
Dividend Aristocrats are still attractive because their total returns have also been very
Dividend Aristocrats are still attractive because their total returns have also been very strong.
What's really unfortunate with the whole situation is that the men and women
who do exactly what history has proven works, that is, continue to dollar cost average, reinvest
dividends, and
focus on strong quality assets, were punished for the stupidity of others.
I'm an Australian investor
who focuses primarily
on dividends as a means for evaluating investments.
For clients
who desire both current income and opportunity for growth, our core portfolio
focuses on the strongest companies which are committed to increasing shareholder wealth through the growth of
dividends over time.
Adrian Holovaty is the poster boy for this type of innovation, and the creation of a «Tools Team» at WashingtonPost.com — talented developers
who focus on content and are part of the newsroom, not the I.T. department — pays
dividends for that site
on what seems like a weekly basis.
Find out how NC State's
focus on entrepreneurship pays big
dividends for students
who think big.
Speculative traders
who focus on high - risk, high - reward stocks (such as penny stocks) are more heavily scrutinized than someone
who invests in blue - chip,
dividend paying companies that are held for the long term.
For taxable investors
who have above - average incomes, it may not make sense to
focus on dividends at all.
«I do my own research,
focusing mostly
on dividend - growth stocks,» says Casey,
who today owns a few shares of Johnson & Johnson, Husky Energy and CenturyLink, a U.S. telecommunications firm.
The investor
who is
focused only
on the
dividend will enthusiastically point out that his income has risen by 5 % every year, and that he's now earning a 6.5 % yield
on cost.
For advisors and their clients
who favor
dividend - paying equities, a number of ETFs
focus on such stocks across Europe.
If I
focused exclusively
on dividend growth stocks, I'd be missing out
on some gems
who either haven't had the opportunity to grow the payout or have made the choice to reallocate that capital towards growth or share buybacks.
And because both ETFs
focus on income - generating assets (bonds and
dividend - paying stocks), they are appealing to investors
who are drawing down their portfolios in retirement.
A skeptical look at the new breed of «indexers»
who focus on weighting portfolios by fundamental factors, such as
dividends and cash flows, rather than market capitalizations.
Notes through November 29, 2005 I have
focused my latest
dividend - based research
on those
who would like to retire today.
I've been blogging now for over 4 years, and anyone
who has followed along for awhile now knows full well that I don't very much like to follow any set rules... For instance, when we first got the party started, I was extremely
focused on Dividend Growth Investing (DGI), and most of my early posts centered around that idea.