August 16

Dividend Stock Dilemma. Is Now The Time To Invest?

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  1. Well, now that no risk is for one, taxed as ordinary income not favorable qualified dividend. Secondly look up a couple, see some with double digit 5 year CAGR, think interest rates will do that? 😁

  2. I’m a long term buy and hold investor in dividend stocks and dividend ETFs for part of my retirement portfolio. I still have 12 to 15 years left to go until I retire. I’m less concerned about dividend stocks going lower so long as the company is not cutting the dividend. I am dripping the dividends, so when the stock is underperforming on price, I’m able to acquire more of the devalued stock with the dividend received. I want to at least partially live off dividends in my retirement instead of having to sell off stocks to support myself in retirement.

    1. Same, but half in a dividend fund, the rest in total stock market with a pinch of intermediate bonds. Best wishes!

  3. Sweet video Dustin! My thoughts… The expectation that bond yields will maintain at current levels is not realistic. Yes.. currently a 5ish % rate is amazing, but some exposure to dividend stocks for a long term portfolio is likely a good call as when bond rates fall, funds will shift to stocks that provide yield.

  4. I think people are making a fundamental error in analysis thinking that companies should be segregated based on what they do with excess cashflow.. dividends and stock buybacks should be placed and combined in the same category.

  5. But you shouldn’t be comparing the price of the underlying asset of dividend stocks to growth stocks. People generally don’t invest in dividend stocks for the asset appreciation. Buy-and-hold investors with primarily divided portfolios don’t seek to sell the underlying asset for gains. Yes, in a year like this one someone could sell a Nvidia stock for a 20% gain, but it’s a one-time taxable event and they could lose those gains with one bad decision this year, next year, or the year after!

  6. My strategy right now for my taxable dividend account is a lot of cash (new money) swept Into SPAXX and writing cash secured puts for aristocrats I want to own. Nearly 5% yield on the cash plus whatever premiums I collect. If I get assigned, good, I get an aristocrat for a discount. If not, rinse and repeat.

  7. Be interesting to do a side by side of current Bonds vs Dividend stocks, taking into account the premium pricing on those Bonds right now. Not sure if that would significantly change the decision making process but it might pull the two options a little closer together.

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