What Can you Buy with Dividends

What Can you Buy with Dividends
What Can you Buy with Dividends?

This post idea came to my mind as I was washing dishes, and I thought of at least 10 things I can buy with dividends. What can you buy with dividends? Well it depends if you actually are in a position to receive them. If you are like some people who believe the government will take all our investments, then you clearly don’t invest in the stock market. What can you buy with dividends is the topic of the hour and I love this topic.

Lets play a little game and think of the possibilities available for the investor who can successfully receive 5 thousand in dividends and doesn’t need the additional income to live off of. Now you can visualize all the fun you can have with an extra 5K annually.

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Nordstrom’s Stock

Nordstrom’s Stock

Hey did you know that Nordstrom’s stock is a dividend payer? I was recently asked what I thought about Nordstrom’s stock and if it’s a good value right now. Given the fact that the market has been frothy aka yuppie word for high, I will try to give it a fair valuation. The company is in the Apparel and accessories sector & industry and was founded in 1901. They operate about 300 retail stores mostly in US, (about 6 in Canada) and have several websites under different brand names. Even though I assume most of the products from those websites will come from Nordstrom’s inventories. The websites are Hautelook, Trunkclub, and Nordstromrack.com. I assume they will have continued success with those websites as the popularity of online shopping increases. Nordstrom’s is expanding faster into the Nordstrom’s Rack name brand, and my guess is because they desire to offer cheaper outlet based priced products and gain market share in that space.

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The Dividend Challenge

 

the dividend challenge
Make sure you get those Benjamin’s to work for you ASAP!

I am obsessed with growing dividends and seeing them compound every year. Well now I am doing a crush the dividend challenge. (#dividendchallenge) The purpose is to well increase the dividends in 2015 and surpass what was received in 2014.

If you make the gap bigger between last year and this year you will experience year over year growth. The benefit of dividends will not only give you a greater sense of return on your money, but it will also provide the opportunity to get even more shares going forward. If you do this, you will invest on purpose for increasing dividends aka icing on the cake in my opinion.

Imagine getting 10K a year from dividends in 2015 and letting things compound. By the year 2020 can you imagine how much you will get from dividends? Its safe to say it will be more than 15 thousand dollars of free money just for holding an asset.

What in life gives you free money for holding it? Nothing does and only investments do. Now are you ready to crush the dividend challenge?

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What is the Best Cash Flow Investment

What is the best cash flow investment
What is Cash Flow?

Have you ever desired to have more cash flow? Well I am on a mission to find out what is the best option for anyone interested in learning about cash flow and learning how to build it. Anyone looking to be financially free and cash flow free must begin finding ways to get multiple streams of income. The cash flow from dividends is a vital piece of the puzzle I believe. I think for the sake of making things easy and for comparison options let’s keep the numbers for all the investing options at 1 grand. The examples below are possible dividend figures for folks looking to increase cash flow.

What is the Best Cash Flow Investment:

1 Thousand Invested Options – 

The Low price company stock option:

GE – 1000 / $26.53 per Share = 37.69 shares X .22 QTR dividend = $8.29 QTRLY (3.32% Yield)

The Mid-Priced Company Stock option:

TGT -1000 / 58.79 per share = 17 shares x .52 QTR dividend = $8.84 QTRLY (3.54% Yield)

The High price company stock with greater future returns option:

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My Dividend Strategy

 

my dividend strategy
Pump up the Portfolio with Dividends as Quickly as Possible.

Do you want to know my dividend strategy? I am hoping the moves I make will pay off within my retirement accounts aka Mutual Funds. I am not suggesting anyone try implementing this strategy for their finances. It has worked well for me on most occasions and I have an ultimate goal in mind, to achieve a high portion of retirement income off my mutual fund dividends. Imagine owning 20 thousand shares of dividend paying mutual funds and stocks growing every quarter. I am on track to finally break the 4 grand total shares owned mark.

I keep a record of fund prices on all funds as to help me decide when is a good time to sell one fund and buy another. The same goes for the dividend amounts each fund pays and how often they pay. The best scenario is when the fund that pays the smallest dividend is at its 52 week high, and the fund that pays me a high dividend is priced lower than usual. I would immediately exchange a set amount of dollars from one fund to another, with no fees or charges. The reason is because they are all in retirement accounts and doing exchanges are free. (401K and IRA) See below for my dividend strategy:

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Dividend December

 

Dividend December
Buy Shares and Get Dividends

Hey readers did you know that December is the ultimate month for dividend income. Most companies pay dividends and capital gains in December, and it has me smiling all the way to the bank. I enjoy the Holiday cheer in this month, because of the unity I get from joyous gatherings with family. All extra money injected into my retirement accounts is just gravy. As of right now I am reinvesting all those earnings to net me more shares and more income for 2014. The compounding effect is growing and I am happy to know that each penny earns me more shares every year. If you grasp this financial tip early on in life you will grow assets exponentially. I wonder if all you readers feel the same way about Dividend December being a great month. If you are not aware then pay close attention to what you are earning in investments, it will allow you the information to make necessary changes for the future.

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Why you should consider Dividend Investing

Why you should consider dividend investing
Dividends grow quarter by quarter

 The average savings account pays only .50 percent interest with traditional banks and 1% with online banks. When you compare these paltry rates to that of dividend stocks the average is closer to 2.5  – 3%, wouldn’t you want to make your money work harder for you? The only reason money should be placed in a savings account at a traditional bank is if the money will be used within 1 year to buy something you are saving for, otherwise dividend stocks are very liquid and provide you a premium above any other alternative.

Take for example a stock like AT&T (T) depending at what price you purchase this bad boy, your yield will vary from 3-6% and is protected as long as AT&T is in business. If a number like this does not intrigue you or make you second guess why you have your money earning so little yield, then something is wrong. My example in  this post is AT&T, which has been in business for over 25 years, but believe me they are not the only dividend stock out there giving away 3% plus in interest.

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Stocks Vs Bonds

Hey guys do you struggle to decide between stocks vs. bonds when you are about to invest. Well you have to ask yourself a simple question? Do you want to be an owner of a company or a liability to a company. If you own stocks you are a minority owner by holding a specific amount of shares in a public company. This also means that you shall have voting rights for major board approved and shareholder allowed company wide decisions every year. I recently received a proxy for a company and two of the board members where being either reelected or replaced from one day to the next, depending on the shareowners votes. I have also received a proxy for me to vote and asked to approve CEO compensation packages. Stocks can also give you a quarterly dividend if you select a company that returns earnings to shareholders. But if you don’t then you will have to depend only on capital appreciation by way of stock price. Always remember buy low to eventually sell high.

If you own bonds the company owes you a specific amount for a specific number of years. In addition to this total amount owed to you, the company shall pay you Semi-annual coupon aka return on your investment. The average amount of years for a bond is either 10 – 20 years, but I have come across a few bonds that the term is 40 years.

If the company goes bankrupt bondholders have priority for getting their money back before stockholders something you should consider if you are deciding between the two investments. The majority of the time though most stockholders will never see a dime in a company bankruptcy situation. This is a brief synopsis between what it means for you as an investor. But if you want a more in-depth financial analysis between current stocks and or bonds see the links below.

CNN Money Article: Here

CNN Money Article about investing in Apple Stocks or Bonds: Here

 

I tend to invest in these in the order listed below:

  1. Index Funds
  2. Mutual Funds (10+ years of history)
  3. Bond Funds (Monthly dividend)
  4. Dividend Paying Stocks (Quarterly Dividend)
  5. REIT’s
  6. Bonds (Series EE and II only, I have never bought an individual Bond)

So this is my preferred investing style, but as I get more comfortable with investing and my discretionary play money grows, I will take a chance with individual bonds one day. I have bond index funds and bond mutual funds that give me the diversification I need with bonds as of this moment. I understand and have heard that municipal bonds offer tax advantages and a reliable income stream for many retirees. This is another consideration for my future portfolio to help me retire early. As of right now I am ok with the index funds, mutual funds, stocks, and Reit’s that I own.

What do you think about stocks vs bonds? Which do you prefer to invest in?

 

Rich Uncle EL