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Dividend Stocks

Investing in dividend stocks is a good way to build long-term wealth.

Dividend stocks aren’t dependent on their share price rising to be successful investments. When you buy a dividend stock, you’ll receive a steady stream of income—generally on a quarterly basis. If the market crashes and the share price begins to fall, the nice 3% or 4% yield (or higher) will soften the blow.

Dividends are a measure of a company’s success and its commitment to shareholders. The companies that consistently grow their dividends are the ones whose sales and earnings are also growing. Companies that lose money or fail to grow usually don’t pay a dividend.

When a company pays a dividend—and especially if it makes an effort to increase that dividend every year—it shows that it cares about rewarding shareholders. Paying a dividend is also a savvy way to attract investors, which is why the share prices of most dividend stocks appreciate over time.

Dividend-paying stocks aren’t going to make you rich overnight. But they can significantly build up your nest egg if you buy and hold them for years, or even decades.

Not all dividend-paying stocks build wealth. You need to search for investments with timelessness and longevity—companies that are sure to not only be around 20 or 30 years from now, but still thriving. Dividend stocks become more powerful, and usually make up a larger part of your annual return, the longer you hold on to them.

For example, if you had bought Walmart (WMT) in April 1990, your current yield on cost would be about 40%. That means you’d be collecting 40% of the value of your original investment every year from dividends alone. If you’d invested $10,000, you’d now be collecting about $4,000 in dividend payments every year.

With investments like these, it’s best to let your money work for you as long as possible.

That can mean riding out some tough times. Walmart declined 23% during the 2000 bear market, for example. Selling as the stock declined would have saved you some money in the short term, but you also would have forfeited that 40% annual yield.

When buying dividend stocks, you have two options. You can either collect the quarterly income or reinvest it to buy more shares. The latter is called a Dividend Reinvestment Plan, or DRIP, and is an easy way to increase the value of your position without having to do much.

To help you find the best dividend stocks, we offer two dividend services at Cabot Wealth Network. Those are the Cabot Dividend Investor, a service that has beaten the market since its February 2014 inception, and Cabot Income Advisor, an advisory that combines high-yield dividend stocks with covered call options trading to earn more income. Both advisories are run by our dividend investing expert, Tom Hutchinson.

Dividend Stocks Post Archives
Dividend stocks aren’t going to crater if the Fed hikes interest rates next month. These two charts show why they’re still the best place to find income.
No matter what you’re doing, you need to stop thinking about saving for retirement and start thinking about retirement investing.
Last week I recommended that growth investors sell Apple (AAPL). But is the AAPL dividend a reason for income investors to buy the stock? Here’s what I recommend.
High-yielding dividend stocks have been some of the best performing stocks on the market this year, leading to some out-of-whack valuations. Is a bubble forming, or is this the new normal for the top dividend payers?
VIDEO: DRIP investing has always been a good way to build long-lasting wealth. In today’s low-interest-rate environment, with CDs, MMAs and Treasury bonds offering little in the way of yields, it has become a necessity for any income investor saving for retirement.
Dividend Aristocrats are known for their safety and decades of dividend growth, not market-beating share price appreciation. That’s changed lately -- and these three dividend stalwarts are growing the fastest.
PAY stock and PLAY stock are headed in two very different directions after each reported earnings on Wednesday. The following charts suggest we should have known which was a “buy” and which was a “sell”.
Buying and holding stocks and enrolling in dividend reinvestment plans aren’t exciting ways to invest, but they’re an effective way to build long-lasting wealth. For evidence, look no further than Grace Groner.
It was a rough week for the retail sector, but that doesn’t mean retailers no longer make good investment opportunities. Many of them still offer healthy share price returns in addition to regular dividend growth. Later in this article, I’ll tell you about what I think are three of the top dividend stocks in the retail sector. But first, let me tell you about my latest shopping experience…
Are there any compelling investment opportunities in New Zealand? Given that the country’s economy still has a large agricultural component, and that a “brain drain” has been a problem in recent decades, no. On the other hand, the complete collapse of commodity prices around the globe in recent years does make me eager to spot a nascent uptrend in despised commodities that have been discarded in the panic selling of recent months.
Today we start with a discussion of oil prices, starting with the chart published in January 2015, which shows that oil prices, after building a long plateau in the $110 per barrel range, plummeted to $50 per barrel in late 2014.
Costco has demonstrated consistent growth, growing revenues and earnings in each of the last five years. So should you buy Costco stock today? Before I answer that question, let me tell you a story. It’s about Apple (AAPL), possibly the most loved, most well known company in the world.
Warren Buffett has long been a proponent of stock buybacks. But the numbers no longer support his theory.
Yesterday I wrote about three of my top dividend paying stock picks for this market environment, and today I want to share another three of the best dividend stocks to invest in right now.