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Obviously neither of us can guarantee a stock is going to go up (whether it pays dividends or not). You have shared a lot of examples of investments in this thread but to be fair the only way to truly compare different portfolio's is to look at the net IRR based on the specific cash flows of an investor's total portfolio, not just specific investments. Re: Taxes yes they are complex but that doesn't mean you should ignore them. And I wasn't attempting to forecast what the Gov't would do with taxes. Just pointing out the fact that starting in 2012 dividends will be taxed as ordinary income which is known right now. |
So what are your thoughts on General Mills (GIS) and American Electric Power (AEP)?
GIS - div/yield .31/3.00, P/E 17.29 AEP - div/yield .47/4.53, P/E 12.75 , but doesn't have a distinct rising growth over the past 10 years. Regarding the Greg and Chad conversation involving taxes .... would you approach the dividend differently in an tax deferred IRA vice a straightforward brokerage account? |
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I have stated previously that I fail to see the point of mutual funds and or other types of funds that attempt to just buy a basket of stocks and try to "emulate" some index (and they also have associated fees). The VTSAX that you mention does just exactly that. It's merely a basket of stocks - blended - and has a "dividend" of 2%. So here's my educational pitch for individual stock selection and thus making your own mini mutual fund - which should - in absolute terms - provide a higher rate of dividend and that is made up of stocks the owner can actually "understand" and have some control over etc. The VTSAX simply holds stocks to emulate "the overall stock market" -- and in good times that might be great - you'd get some capital growth - but the dividend spin off of 2% isn't sufficient to carry the investment thru the inevitable downturns. Here's the funds top ten holdings: Exxon Mobil Corporation (XOM) Apple, Inc. (AAPL) International Business Machines Corp (IBM) Chevron Corp (CVX) The Procter & Gamble Co (PG) Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) AT&T Inc (T) General Electric Co (GE) Pfizer Inc (PFE) And here's why I'm trying to educate rather than try to just say "buy this or buy that or don't do this - do that"... AT&T's current dividend is 5.83% ----- ALMOST TRIPLE what the VTSAX is paying out - and it's a holding of this index fund GE's current dividend is 3.76% --- ALMOST DOUBLE what the VTSAX is paying - and is a holding of this fund So with barely any research at all -- a person should be capable of getting a better dividend return -- and if all you want to do is emulate the stock market, any number of the biggest of the bigs will and have done that for years and years. Now -- Please don't take me wrong - I'm not arguing with you. I am however - trying to educate people to help them see that they are perfectly capable of going out and "investing" and having a bit of fun doing so - and have a firm grasp on what it is they own, and their reasoning behind it. If you had 10,000 to invest -- why settle for a market emulator that's going to go down with the market or up with the market and it's going to pay you less than the rate of inflation to hold on to it. A guy could just buy AT&T and at least triple his dividend rate and perhaps stay above the rate of inflation. I'm on a flight - so don't want to do the math - but a 6% compounded rate of return over time is going to be so far ahead of a 2% it isn't funny. |
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Again -- on the educational side of this only -- I disagree -- but with the following differences -- again because when we make big statements - we need (in this thread) to make sure people understand the THOUGHT behind such. There would be absolutely ZERO advantage to hold tax free muni bonds in a tax advantaged account (which means tax deferred really) because there is no tax due. That holding would be best held in an ordinary account because it's not going to affect your taxes. IF -- BIG IF -- these BONDS are CORPORATE BONDS -- then that is different because that INTEREST paid is taxable at ordinary income tax rates. It would - of course - be TAX DEFERRED if held in an IRA/401 type account. A "GROWTH STOCK" (pays no dividend for this discussions sake) -- or let's really just say ANY STOCK that has a GAIN - has NO TAXABLE EVENT if it's not sold - i.e., the gain is NOT REALIZED... that stock can grow to the moon and have no tax consequence until you sell. SO the major difference in where you'd hold this type of stock is not really important under current (I should underline that! CURRENT) tax law. LONG TERM GAINS are currently taxed at 15% regardless. Only SHORT TERM GAINS (held less than one year and a day) are taxed at ordinary income tax rates.... So if your mother is 80 and has virtually no income - and you sell 10 grand of her long term holdings - big deal - she pays 15%! And it would be less of a big deal if you sold something short term because she may have NO TAX DUE based on her income. But these are CPA discussions not really "investing" except that they can affect your return so are worth talking about. But now we're having a tax discussion -- rather than an INVESTING 102 discussion.... Here's something I've had to tell my CPA - and trust me when I tell you that my tax bill is beyond ridiculous.... so we have LOTS of discussions of where, when, why and how come! "If I make a buck and have to pay the gubment 40 cents of it -- I still made 60 cents.... right?" Isn't it better that I make 60 cents than nothing at all? Frankly -- I'm happy as hell my tax bill is huge - 'cause that means I made a killing! And "they" only got a small percentage of it. The rest is all mine!:cheers: :woot: EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEHHHHHHHHHHHHAAAAAAAAAA |
Hopefully next year I can graduate from kindergarten and nap times to 1st grade and start earning some grades rather than stars!:woot:
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To take that one step farther if she did own bonds or high dividend stocks (maybe steady eddy's that don't have large capital gains) she would be better off having those in the IRA/401K accounts. Of course this matters most for retirement investing, vs. just plain old investing so I won't try to clutter up the thread with it. Quote:
If anyone is really interested in tax efficiency of their investments I suggest visiting the following link (just one of many good explanations, fund biased). http://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Princ...Fund_Placement Below is an illustration of what I've been trying to convey (fund biased, but you can substitute most of the "funds" verbiage with "stocks" and get the same answer). http://img190.imageshack.us/img190/1...efficiency.png |
Good discussion Chad.... and the right way -- in THIS THREAD I believe to discuss this kind of stuff... because we can have a private "insiders view" discussion and argue points etc -- BUT -- HATE THAT BIG BUTT -- then nobody else can follow along or learn from it.
And I'm not trying to tell you how to post - but I think you see what my intent is and if we - both - all - anyone - makes a point of something then we really need to have it be a readable understandable dissertation rather than just blanket statements. So, kudos to you! I'll make one point about all of the TAX discussion. There are so many scenarios that only YOUR OWN CPA / TAX PROFESSIONAL should recommend how you handle your investments. Talk to them FIRST - and get a grip on what is best for YOUR personal situation. It's not a one size fits all answer. Everyones age - income bracket - investment strategy etc needs to be tailor made. For instance - everyone on here knows I've been retired for years... and my tax strategy is to minimize taxes and maximize my annual income... thus - dividends (that magic 15%) and Tax Free Muni's are what I go for.... I already own apartment complexes and other "income" producing investments, so I'm already at the max tax bracket on those... But that's a far different scenario than someone that is trying to maximize a return on a 401/IRA and that is different yet on a ROTH... and some on here don't qualify for a ROTH etc... Thus the importance to spend $300 (?) on a consultation with a pro. It can make you money and SAVE you an unexpected tax bill. The old "OOPS AND I THOUGHT I WAS BEING SO SMART" kind of oops. Or the "but I read somewhere that...." The sickening response being - "yes that's correct - but you don't qualify for...." |
Top dow stocks of 2011
So here's something I find "interesting" -- as I've been constantly pitching "the names you know" --- 'cause you can find happiness in growth of capital AND get that dividend (sorry Chad -- it's a theme that works!)
Here's the TOP FIVE DOW STOCKS OF 2011 --- Check out that capital growth and how many of these are names you know? Top five Dow gainers of 2011: MCD +31% (McDONALDS) , IBM +27% (IBM), PFE +24% (PFIZER) , HD +20% (HOME DEPOT), KFT +20% (KRAFT) Is that complicated? :D Highly doubtful they will repeat -- and there's all kinds of info about chasing past performance etc. But I'd buy and hold any of these. |
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