Quote:
Originally Posted by Chad-1stGen
I was generally comparing dividend stocks to a total stock market index fund like VTSAX which has been yielding 2% and which I think has a much better chance of actually achieving the following statement you made:
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Since this is an EDUCATIONAL thread - I will try - as I have been trying - to explain reasoning and thought process in all my replies. I'm not "debating" any actual thought process - rather - trying to open it up and just discuss these ideas and thoughts for the purpose of educating - and let the reader decide what the take-away points are for themselves. I'm also trying to be at the kindergarten level so when someone reads my posts - they can actually have an "ah ha" moment and actually understand, in a broad general way, what I'm saying.
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.