Quote:
Originally Posted by GregWeld
Lance --- I like your strategy.
I would add one other critical criteria to get a handle on ----- EX Dividend dates (subtracting at least 3 BUSINESS days) ==== Might was well time your purchases to either pick up the dividend ----- or buy they EX dividend when they typically drop the equivalent of the dividend payout. It just feels better to do this --- it's all mental --- but investing is more mental than anything. Getting a dividend payment just after purchasing is like an endorphin!
5% dividend rate is what I kind of plan for. The dividend is just one criteria -- coupled with the more magic Total Return -- coupled with "sleep at night" and some higher paying "risk on".
By the way --- good for you.... I think you've come a long ways from when you first posted. I also hope this works like you want it too. Because that mental doubt can creep in and kill a guys best laid plans.
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Thanks Greg...for the compliments and the help through this. I mean it.
Looks like I just missed the dividend on OLN so I'll be looking to pick it up on the cheap just after (so to speak).
My calculations were basically just to figure the return of the dividend. I had to come up with a way to figure out how many shares of each I'd be purchasing, then how much dividend each share would pay and then carry it out for a year.
It's an interesting exercise. What was interesting to me was the listed P\E ratios didn't jive at all with my calcs...like I thought it would. Shows that some companies really do pay more back in dividends than others, which is what I went looking for.
Total return including share price growth is just so much of a different animal I didn't want to muddy the water with that for this exercise. I know it is important, but market swings either way can effect a share price while not really changing anything with the way the company operates.
I guess it might not be too hard to go back into my google portfolio and change the purchase dates to a year ago at the share price then and see what my total returns might have been. Now that I'm armed with the dividend info I may try that just to see.
I'm also thinking of weighing my top 10 picks a bit heavier than 5% of the total and taking a bit away from my second 10 picks, like down to 3-4% of the total each. Going to sort them by sector and evaluate them more on that level then decide.