Here's a very boring - but interesting if read correctly - article on dividends. It's comparing the dividend "growth" and payouts of AT&T (T) and a couple other familiar names.
http://seekingalpha.com/article/2810...at-and-t?ifp=0
I wish I'd know you'd all read it - and then we'd come back and dissect it before I make this next statement.
When you're reading this article - he stated that he was NOT considering the dividend reinvestment. To me - that ignores a FAR FAR larger "key" to growing your retirement funds. Reinvesting the dividend is where the snowball affect comes into play. The dividends buy more shares every quarter - paying more dividends buying more shares and so on. So here's my takeaway on the article. If AT&T pays TWICE what PEPSI (PEP) does per quarter... without doing any math - I would think that long term you'd be buying more shares of T thus growing that investment at a faster rate.
It would take me hours to calculate a hypothetical 10,000 investment - then factor in if the stock stayed at the same price year after year - how many shares you'd buy each quarter and so on... to be able to factually work this all out. But it's really really good food for thought when you're COMPARING various investments. It's just another tool in your box to think about.
I think - again - without doing the math here... that the TOTAL RETURN of an investment over the same period of time (we only can see historically what this is) is telling us the historical advantage or disadvantage each investment has.
100% return over 5 years doubles your money in 5 years! Regardless of the dividend percentage you still did a double. If the comparable company is less, then you didn't do as well.
So to use this articles names:
PEPSI (PEP) 5 year TR = 61.4% Pays 2.71%
AT&T (T) 5 year TR = 61.6% Pays 5.6%
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS (TXN) 5 year TR = 128.3% Pays 2.54%
VERIZON (VZ) 5 year TR = 108% Pays 4.7%
So here's my "thoughts" -- and in full disclosure I own 20,000 shares of AT&T...
When we are looking at the TR we're only looking HISTORICALLY -- we then MUST make some kind of wild ass guess about what the company is going to do going forward. History is nothing but the past - it doesn't guarantee the future. You still must live day to day with your choices and those choices are for reasons only you can detail. I say this because numbers are numbers - they help us and can guide us - but if you buy PEP based on just the numbers -- but you don't like PEPSI and actually buy and drink Coke (KO) products... then what happens to your mind when PEPSI goes down or does something you think is stupid? Ditto this argument on Verizon vs AT&T. I used to own both - I might have made more money holding both... but I like and use AT&T so that's the one I've kept.
What I'm saying here in too many words is -- you still must know and like the companies you invest in. Return numbers are important - don't discount them! 100% is far better than 40%... make no mistake about that. But in DOWN MARKETS you have to be comfortable in your own skin. You can't get to 100% if you sell the first time you freak out.