Dividend Myth Busters

moneygrabberI am continuously talking about dividends and how I am building my income portfolio around that philosophy. Dividend investing is one of the investing strategies among many other different styles of investing and trading strategies. In addition, I am a believer in two sides of a coin, I am a believer of black, while, and gray, and I am a believer in negative and positives.


Keeping with this, I am not dumb to believe that dividend investing is an ultimate panacea of all investing strategies. Anything that we do in our lives has two sides and we manage it in our own ways. Similarly dividend investing also has its dark side and unfortunately, it is often the focus in many discussions. We need to remove some of the myths associated with it and understand how it can be managed. Following is my attempt to bust some these myths associated with dividends.

We view dividends as are very small. Very low dividend yield (of the order of 1% to 3% only) is cited as being the main reason. It is said that these low yields do not even match the savings accounts interest rate of 7%.

Dividend yield is “dividends paid per share” divided by “stock price”. Now, if the stock price is over valued, dividend yield is bound to be low. If the stock is priced in excess of 20 PE ratio, dividend is bound to be lower than 2%. That does not necessarily mean that dividends have low yield. Stock price is governed by the market sentiment; it does not have any fundamental basis. If you choose to only look at high flyer stocks of the day, then you are bound to feel yields are less. This is addressed by investing in stocks whose dividend yields are based on fair value and earnings of the company. And not based on stock price on any given day, given week, or given year.

In addition, dividend investing is not about present yield. It is about what future yield (or your Yield on Cost) you will end up with. Does this bust the myth? Continue reading rest of this article…

When to Start Investing ?

moneymaze1Few days back, I received a very interesting email, snippet is as follows “…. I am developing a keen interest in your dividend investing philosophy. The more I read the more I get excited about. The earlier one starts, the better it is and I want to start now……. I am 24 years old and have a full time job for last two years. The earlier I start the better it will be for dividend investing. Can you advise 5 companies where I can invest and forget them…..”.

After exchanging few emails I observed his (I don’t know whether it was his or her, for the sake of this post I will use “his”) parents had taken a low six figure educational loan for him to complete this MBA education. After he started working, in his quest to quickly earn few bucks, he started investing in equity markets and is now under water. Now this reader wants to put his financial house in order.

On a personal note, I have gone through the student debt phase. I can very well understand what it means to be under student loan debt.

I am not a personal finance advisor. So I could not give him any specific advice per se. However, I shared my personal experience and discussed with him a very high level frame which I had followed. This discussion was not directly related to dividend investing. But I think it followed the essence of dividends investing (i.e. strong foundation and small building blocks). I thought of sharing this framework with readers of my blog. Continue reading rest of this article…



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