Quote:
Originally Posted by SSLance
BTW Greg, don't ever let up on what your are posting and preaching...
After thinking about what you said a bit today, I went ahead and made the purchases I was looking at making. No time like the present...
From what I'm seeing, Dividend Champion stocks don't really make big moves, they just kind of trod along...so it really doesn't make much sense waiting for dips to buy as the dips just aren't that big of a deal.
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UP or DOWN.... That's why people don't think they're (dividend payers) worth investing in.... they're not Google or the OLD Microsoft.... where people (including me) got rich in months not years.
The part of dividend stocks that I like the best is that while the interest rates (rising) kill the stock market... the dividend payers are supported on the way down (their share price falling) by the dividend percentage. So let's say the interest rate market (CDs/Bonds/Treasuries) starts to pay decent rates (remember those?) they then compete for investment money with stocks... so if Altria (MO) is only paying 5% and a blue haired old lady can buy a 5% tax free bond.... the bond becomes more attractive (tax free 5% vs 5% taxable dividend) --- so the price of MO would then fall until that dividend rate equals the bond payout. But once they're pretty equal -- then MO would stabilize in price.
What people fail to add in to the mix is that the TOTAL RETURN, over time, will be far far higher (historically) on stocks. Just refer to the Bull vs Bear returns on stocks... pretty hard to go find a chart showing a 100% return on bonds... you get nothing but your money back on a CD...
Just remember that there is only "X" amount of money floating around -- and various investments all compete for that same amount of money. When one thing is "hot" there will be outflow from something else - and it ebbs and flows from various types of investments looking for the current best return. Right now - we're in a period where the market seems to be the best place. But it's also why we need to be vigilant about interest rates because they can't possibly go down from here.... and as long as you UNDERSTAND that and what it means to your holdings etc... then you're good. If you don't understand your investments - then you freak out - sell out (having bought high now you're selling low)... and thus loose out.
I personally agree with the FED --- they need to keep interest rates low for a decent period of time yet. People (some) are just now recovering from the great recession. Some are doing really well -- but the average man in the street is still in recovery mode... and the low interest rate will help housing... spurs investments by business... and all that trickles down to jobs/labor.