DividendGrowth.ca Subscribers
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- | * On April 2 2025 from the rose garden the tariff chaos began getting more serious. Markets reacted. If you are an investor who buys individual companies through your direct investing account, you receive your dividends directly from your companies. There is no third party. As a result, you are not in ‘the market’. You can enjoy any market mayhem. It’s true. Your return will be the yield on your company’s stock plus its growth. | + | * On April 2 2025, from Don’s |
- | * What’s wealth? Is wealth the growing cash flow, or the price of the asset? | + | * What’s wealth? Is wealth the growing cash flow, or the price of the asset? |
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March 2025 | March 2025 | ||
* Ten-year annualized return to late March 2025 for S&P’s 500 was 7.93%. That’s about normal*. But things are no longer normal. Over the same decade, though, from 2014, the Dow Jones Canada Select Dividend Return was just 2.75%. How come just 2.75%? It’s a long story, but essentially professionals do not select the right companies. (Notice that the title does not say dividend growth). Over the last ten years, the average dividend growth of the 24 companies the Connolly Report follows¡ was 8.2%. Our yields, on average, grew from 3.1% in 2014 to 6.9%. * I would not buy an index now (March 20 2025): It’s way to expensive now! | * Ten-year annualized return to late March 2025 for S&P’s 500 was 7.93%. That’s about normal*. But things are no longer normal. Over the same decade, though, from 2014, the Dow Jones Canada Select Dividend Return was just 2.75%. How come just 2.75%? It’s a long story, but essentially professionals do not select the right companies. (Notice that the title does not say dividend growth). Over the last ten years, the average dividend growth of the 24 companies the Connolly Report follows¡ was 8.2%. Our yields, on average, grew from 3.1% in 2014 to 6.9%. * I would not buy an index now (March 20 2025): It’s way to expensive now! | ||
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* **Retirement Planning** - "If you are planning to retire in 10 to 15 years, we think you should consider buying stocks that have long histories of dividend increases. While investors tend to look at the current yield (the indicated dividend divided by the share price) of a stock, we believe yield of cost)the indicated dividend dividend by the share purchase price) may be a more accurate measure of the long term value of a dividend." | * **Retirement Planning** - "If you are planning to retire in 10 to 15 years, we think you should consider buying stocks that have long histories of dividend increases. While investors tend to look at the current yield (the indicated dividend divided by the share price) of a stock, we believe yield of cost)the indicated dividend dividend by the share purchase price) may be a more accurate measure of the long term value of a dividend." | ||
- | Retirement income up from 25¢ a share to $3.60 on one of the companies I bought in 1990. Two hundred shares were purchased for $3.64 each. Two 2:1 splits since then mean we now have 800 shares paying $3.60 a year. Details going back the 30 years are inside for subscribers (Oct 2020 blog page). And notice, we are getting 100 percent of our money back each year now ($3.64 price vs $3.60 dividend). | + | Retirement income up from 25¢ a share to $3.60 on one of the companies I bought in 1990. Two hundred shares were purchased for $3.64 each. Two 2:1 splits since then mean we now have 800 shares paying $3.60 a year. Details going back the 30 years are inside for subscribers (Oct 2020 blog page). And notice, we are getting 100 percent of our money back each year now ($3.64 price vs $3.60 |
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- | * May 19, 2020 → **Retirement Investing** If anyone would, you'd think Jonathan Clements, a reporter with the Wall Street Journal since 1990, would get it right. But he didn' | + | |
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- | * “If bonds are supposedly safe”, a reader asked Rob Carrick for his August 24 2021 column, “ why are my bond ETFs losing money?” Rob’s answer was fine, here’s mine. People ‘think’ bonds are safe. Bonds are not safe. Bonds are a risk asset just like stocks. I do not buy bonds, never have, never will. My income from quality common stocks grows, year after year. Good stocks become safer as their cash flow grows. Bonds don’t. | + | |
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- | * After a decade or so, quality dividend growth stocks provide __yields__ which outpace the TSX and that's without factoring in appreciation in the stock price. Learn about this inside. The entry fee is $50. Alternatively, | + | |
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- | Inside dividendgrowth.ca you will learn: | + | |
- | * that as the dividend grows, so will the price of your quality rising dividend company. We constantly compare dividend growth and price growth. The correlation, | + | |
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- | * Discover that ETFs allow advisors, who know little about investing, to play with the hard-earned money of savers using the faulty concepts of modern portfolio theory: over–diversification, | + | |
- | * Inside you will learn how to scrap just about the entire methodology of modern portfolio theory and return to the timeless principles of investing. Take your sacred savings out of the hands of middlemen who have no skin in your game. | + | |
- | * Oct 1st 2019 - a short essay on the inferior performance of professionals . . . | + | |
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- | * you'd never believe why most pros can't beat the index. It's why I do not buy ETFs. | + | |
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- | * how to select the few quality companies you need to build wealth. | + | |
- | * discover the value of yield data . . . yields send signals | + | |
- | * that the real goal of advisors is not aligned with yours | + | |
- | * why ETFs are hawked on low fees and what's essentially wrong with ETFs | + | |
- | * that yield alone does not move the needle. What does? | + | |
- | * how a ' | + | |
- | * why not to be sold preferreds or bonds | + | |
- | * the calculation to do before buying a stock | + | |
- | * from year-by-year dividend data sheets (not just a five average) going back to the turn of the century for 35 companies | + | |
- | * seven characteristics of any investment | + | |
- | * asset allocation in May 2019 blog | + | |
- | * obtain proof that returns are determined by valuation | + | |
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- | * Philip Fisher' | + | |
- | * why we don't buy bonds . . . since 1979, on $100,000, bonds earned just $1.6 million, equities returned $7.5 million | + | |
- | * how quality stocks become safer than bonds (W. Buffett 1918) | + | |
- | * Ideas and opinions expressed in this blog should not be taken as any type of guidance. | + | |
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- | Join the winning group! | + | |
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- | **WARNING about ETFs**: | + | |
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- | By definition, index ETFs can't win. This was proved again beginning on February 24th 2020 ETFs will, going forward, most likely lose again. Returns are determined by valuation: the price you pay to get in. Funds lost the last time the market was high. From 2000 to early 2009 the TSX gained only 0.74% a year. . . less than 1% a year. Over about the same decade, however, the CAGR* for dividend growth stocks was 9.6%. You do not buy an index ETF when the market is high. *compound annual growth rate In 2008, the market was high. From 2008 to 2018, dividend growth on the stock the Connolly Report follows was 9.0%. In the same period, the TSE was up only 1.6%. ♣ There are stocks in the index that do not pay a dividend, let alone raise their dividends. Where will your retirement income come from? Yields on ETFs are low. If you buy a stock that does __not__ pay a dividend, you are betting someone else will pay a higher price than you did. | + | |
- | Your savings are sacred: don't let someone who has no skin in the game, play with your money. Learn to do it yourself. | + | |
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- | This investor likes a lot of dividend growth stocks: | + | |
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- | Most investors do not know, let alone believe, that as the dividend rises the price of the stock will also rise. Think. If a company is throwing off more cash each year (dividends), | + | |
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- | * ETFs allow so-called ' | + | |
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- | Linked just below is a rather good item (May 23 2011) about reasons to buy and hold dividend growth stocks: | + | |
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- | * Living from dividends in retirement [[WSJ_May10]] | + | |
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== Subscribers == | == Subscribers == | ||