@@mattderron lol. Good to see you have a sense of humor. Well, we all make mistakes and we all have different opinions. Most people are not 100% correct or 100% wrong. I personally focus on total returns, not how high a fund or stocks dividend percentage is.
Total return is critical, we definitely agree there. In terms of the mistake - I mean it’s just too funny because of the topic and thumbnail of the video 😂. As long as people can still get value from the content it’s all good if I screwed up simple math like everyone says lol
@@mattderronyour video, including the error, is one of the best video's I have seen on (dividend) investing in a while. You explain everything clearly and you stay neutral all the way. Thank you. Marked for rewatching in a few years with my daughters 👍🏻.
Fun fact: here in Brazil local investors' dividends are not taxed whatsoever, so most companies just pay huge amounts of their profits (25-50%) directly to the shareholders. The companies that pay the most dividends are often the ones that offer greater returns to the shareholders overall, so pretty much half of the people who do buy&hold are dividend investors over here, and it has been a very successful strategy over the last 40 years or so
@@ironrye4317 Um fato curioso é que menos de 2% das pessoas jurídicas investem na bolsa ou em algum meio de investimentos privado. Os brasileiros não tem educação financeira e nem ao menos tem consciência disso. Isso reflete em pobreza demasiada conservada pelo poder público
@@mattderronthe tax rate on companies is higher in Brazil than in the US. We are in the middle of a tax system reform. There was an ideia that dividends were going to be taxed and the tax rate for comapnies would be reduced in order to keep the overall taxation in the economy the same. I am not very optimistic. Too many unknowables but I think dividends will eventually be taxed.
No it's not. Google comes to you and says we are selling shares, and plan to never pay dividend. But you can sell to greater fool. So everyone is relying on another idiot to come along and pay more. This is not sustainable to make money beyond inflation. It basically works like a ponzi asset. Also the myth that a dividend lowers stock price is repeated by fools.
This is honestly one of the best videos I've seen on dividend investing. Not just mindlessly claiming outperformance, but instead highlighting the psychological impact is really refreshing to see.
I'm a small scale investor (something like 6k or so spread out over the course of about 4-5 years) and i don't have much working knowledge on the subject, but when i first started i figured "well i can sell if needed, but if the company will essentially pay me to hold and invest, it's a win/win". Granted my total dividends yield after all this time is maybe a couple hundred dollars so there isn't /much/ benefit so far, but its there
Everyone Has a Plan Until They Get Punched in the Mouth. Everyone says 4% rule until they see a 50% decline over multiple years. When you are in retirement and rely on your assets for income, you do not want to be facing a 2008/2009 situation that may ultimately put you back into the workforce.
But what does that have to do with the dividend argument? I can just restate the same thing again and again, selling shares is the same as collecting dividends even in downturns, so if you can not count on selling shares for retirement, you also can not count on dividends.
@@larsleo7059 Not exactly. Selling shares put downward presser on the price of a stock. In the same way that buying shares will put upward presser on the stock. Will one person selling 100 shares of Amazon make a difference, no. Free cash flow in many ways is more important to look at than "value" or "growth"
I think of the "dividend is no free money" argument like this: You have a cow that produces milk. When you take milk from the cow, it loses weight, but obviously, it will continue to produce milk, therefore the cow is the important part. Always have good cows! (And also, being a Brazilian investor makes me a natural dividend defender)
Plus dairy cattle is raised differently from beef cattle. If a company pays consistent dividends that tells you something about HOW they are being run, compared to something that can swing wildly at the whim/tweet of its CEO.
To stay in the analogy: on the other hand there is a cow that does not produce milk but instead gets offspring a lot faster than the milk giving cow. If you need the money, you can still sell the offspring and have the same amount of cow that the other guy with the milk giving cow has.
@@keineangabe8993 that would be more like having a cow that grows fast, and when you need money you sell a part of the cow and hopefully it grows back 😅
I am now retired. Prior to retirement I purchased a chunk on SCHD. The stock price has dropped to the point that last year that investment was down around 3 thousand dollars. Not a happy camper when I compared that to my NASDAQ indexed fund. Then i looked at the dividends and capital gains and realized that SCHD had distributed around 3 thousan dollars. Since I dont plan on selling anytime soon I felt a lot better. Had to remember the point of buying SCHD in the first place.
Good call. SCHD is a great one, I have it in all my portfolios as a long-term focused "steady as she goes" investment. Nice regular distribution that I feel comfortable just putting on reinvest; between auto-reinvesting the distribution and my additional contributions I feel like I can comfortably not worry about it and in 20 to 25 years it'll be a nice part of my portfolio's value and income generation.
It makes me feel like dividend investors don't understand diversification. The choice isn't dividends stocks vs general stocks by themselves. You don't need to pull money during stock markets drops if you have some combination of cash reserves, laddered CDs, money market funds, bonds, annuities, REITs, real estate, and/or alternative investments. If you don't want to sell stocks during a recession then it's not complicated to make a plan for that
@@rayzerotI don’t like the idea of having to sell an asset just to touch the cash. I prefer to keep the asset while receiving the cash flow.. even Kevin O’Leary from shark tank said “if an investment doesn’t pay you anything, it’s not an investment” something along those lines but I agree.. plus dividends allow you to get more loans from the banks, they count as “income” where as Capital Gains does not count as income and you can not receive loans from banks to purchase investment realestate or anything…
@@cavejohnson4054 Dividends are unaffected by price changes. Dividends are part of company's profits (not price on market) and are paid according to the shares you own.
Dude, spot on advice. Great job! And yeah, I think we investors overestimate how hard it is to stay in the market when things aren't looking too good. Whenever I'm tempted to either cut losses or capture profits, I remind myself of Fidelity's study of their best performing portfolios; the best performers were either dead or forgot they had an account.
When the stock market goes down, as it has recently, I am comforted by the fact that the dividends I am re-investing are buying more shares at lower prices.
This is the part that MOST people refuse to acknowledge... As long as my Div stocks dont go belly up, im actually somewhat happy to seem them fall in value for a time. Now that may not be the case when im 60+ and retired, but it is at 38 and rolling dividends...
Most of us probably buy more stock when it’s “on sale” and as it recovers the appreciation balloons on top of getting more dividends. Currently my dividend stock yield aggregate plus the appreciation is similar to my growth accounts.
If you want a money printing machine, growth stocks print more money. And a small amount of planning and diversification will keep you from needing to sell stocks during a recession. Cash, REITS, direct real estate, institutional bonds, money market funds, annuities, alternative investments... take your pick to cover those multi-year dips and then reap a well earned reward when the market recovers
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
They certainly can be. One of the big issues with buying growth stocks is that growth is finite. At some point whatever market will be saturated and any further growth would violate local antitrust regulations. For most people though, just a set of index funds covering stocks and bonds both foreign and domestic is good enough. Doing much better does require a fair amount of work and a bit of luck.
You make an excellent case! 👍🏼. I’ll add 1 more point… Seeing my monthly dividend income grow is EXTREMELY motivating to continue investing . Buying growth makes sense intellectually, but during a bear market, watching my growth portfolio shrink…the motivation isn’t as high as it is for dividend investing. A lot of this is psychological! 😁
I don’t necessarily disagree with your view, dividends come with taxes (in a taxable account). I prefer them there because I want ultimate income flexibility, but I realize that’s not for everyone. The main thing for me is picking great companies, whether they pay a dividend or not is a secondary consideration. If you’re absolutely against dividends and can find more than enough great companies that don’t pay them - then that absolutely works for you.
@justthebrttrk I agree with most of what you said, except for single stock picking. If you picked big cap companies that are leaders in their field...they are better than any etf or mutual funds performance wise...but you just have to keep up with the news and sell it once things look bad for their company or they lose this leadership. Mutual fund and etf, I admit, you can just leave it there and not think about it
I base a lot of my leverage/loan decisions on where my dividend income is. I aim for 1x or 2x my dividend maximum on my monthly loan obligations, that way, I can take cash from my taxable brokerage dividend account instead of DRIP if I need to draw on it if I lose my job or get seriously injured, etc. HUGE psychological buffer to know you have 1k/mo you can draw on from the back pocket, or whatever your number is. If you lose your job amidst a market crash have fun being forced to sell at deep losses to cover your mortgage payment or whatever leverage you took on. Nightmare scenario, and it's playing out for many.
I am a dividend guy......I have been reinvesting all my dividends to the same company, which buys me more shares. When I retire, (soon), I will be using my dividends in my pocket. Is it perfect? No. Nothing is perfect. It is simply a way I like to investing in part of my stocks......the rest are growth stocks.
Doing it like that is actually quite dumb. Because the dividends are taxed at whatever your tax rate is. So you lose a portion every time you plow your dividends back into the same company. Why not forego the dividend and just let the company use that cash to repurchase its own shares for you instead?
@@johnmonk3381 I think the issue here is that the company doesn’t give you a choice. To me the most important part is to find the right companies. Whether or not they pay a dividend or do buybacks or both is not up to me. But ultimately picking the right companies overall is what leads to success
@@mattderron You are right in some way but I generally prefer to stay away from companies that pay huge chunk of their profits as dividends. Most of these are utilities, REITs, pipelines, shipping companies, in general, they are also high capex businesses, another turn off for me. I want a business that has little capex, operates with a high moat preferably a monopoly and generates a ton of cash without having to commit to huge capital reinvestments. Something like google or visa and mastercard. These are generally businesses in software and finance, with much lower capex which is why these are way smarter investments than companies that just do large dividend yields. Just my 2 cents of course, I just don't like to be paid too much in cash, because then I have pay the taxes and then figure out where to put that money now and ANY investment is better than just cash OR it is not, period. That's the point of investing. You just don't want too much cash returned to you so you can let it compound over time. So I just buy a good company that fits the bill and do nothing for the next 10, 20 years and it will do wonders minus the hassle
@@johnmonk3381 buying a portion of my portfolio is not based on the dividend completely, but often a truly good company (for example Coke) which also happens to have a good dividend. I re-invest the dividend into the stock, which gets me more shares. When I am retired, I will start using the dividends as part (not all) of my income.
I love how the conversation is if they pay out dividends they have no plans to grow the company but stock buy backs aren't in the same conversation. They are inflating the price because they have no plans to grow the company.
You’re right it is very similar, the only argument you could make is that stock buybacks can be stopped and started as company conditions change without too much issue. Dividends once you start you kind of have to keep them up since the market treats a dividend cut as bad
@@johanneswerner7649qualified dividends are NOT heavily taxed. It’s usually the same as your capital gains rate, and instead of holding for a year to get it you just need to hold for a 60 day period surrounding the dividend
@@johanneswerner7649Non qualified dividends are taxed as ordinary income but after the first year eligible dividends become qualified dividends and are taxed at a long term rate of 0% for the first $44k. I supposed you could make the argument that you could simply sell investments up to $44k at 0% every year but if you hit a recession and the market is down you either have a cashflow issue or sell at a loss potentially greater than a single year of dividends at ordinary income rates.
I just bought $2k of O on Monday at $52/share. Right now it's at $49/share. So if I waited until today I'd have gotten a little over 1 more share. The dividend for that 1 share I missed out on is pennys, I'm not going to worry about it. Like Warren Buffet says "you don't lose money on a stock until you sell it ".
It's impossible to know exactly what a stock will do price wise on any given day. If you believe in the company long term then just keep checking that their story is what you expect, and you should be fine.
O stock is down YTD, 1 year and 5 year but a lot of people buy it because it's good for monthly income and it pushed a lot with dividend investors. ABR is up YTD, 1 year and 5 year and they have a much better dividend CAGR, but Dividend Kings like O deserve a premium price.
Dividends are very popular in Australia which is helped by a unique system called "franking credits" which come with dividends and stop double taxation on company profits. Basically any tax already paid on the company profits paid to you as a shareholder are recognised as tax already paid when the shareholder does there own tax return.
Of course most experienced investors know that some dividend shares go down slightly after every dividend is paid then it goes up before then next dividend payout
Exactly. Making it sound like the small price drop ex-dividend is permanent is some strange logic. If things worked like that, dividend share prices would eventually fall to 0.
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
What strange behavior - you've posted this comment 5+ times already. I don't claim to be a licensed advisor. Just a guy that likes stocks and learned about investing over years. I share my portfolio for full transparency on my channel for people who want to follow along. I preach that people start with index funds, do their own research, and never blindly follow anybody else's investments. You should just breathe man, sometimes just ignoring and moving on with your life is the move lol
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
I own both dividend paying stocks and ones that do not. I find the latter just as risky in terms of share price. At least with a dividend paying stock, when the price goes down, you at least have dividends until the price recovers. Dividends can also be forecasted to some degree (no guarantees). Share prices cannot. I have also noticed that stocks that pay dividends tend to be more stable (share price).
@@majorgear1021 I avoid those like poison. The majors rarely have that problem. That is why I avoid investing in the small guys. BUT I do sometimes get hit. Got one now. Alumina. So I understand your point.
Really appreciated you walking through the Meta ups and downs over 5 years. Great lesson. I’ve walked through that with stocks and said I’m holding long term and then 2-3 years on am looking at a negative return and wondering what I’m doing wrong. I’m not an all-dividends guy, but have a healthy allocation to dividend payers and I certainly see the psychological effect of being able to assure myself that at least I’m getting paid while I wait for the stock price to rebound.
@@sybo59 I said I see the psychological effect. Real effect… insubstantial. Psychological: I understand why people gravitate to dividends because it feels good, much like many things we do that aren’t really valid but make us feel better.
Dividends are dope. Personally, I sometimes use my dividends to buy other dividend and growth stocks for diversification instead of reinvesting in the same stock. To each their own methods though. The good thing is that you’re investing in the first place and that’s what’s important. Salute for the content!
The other benefit to dividend stocks is that you will continue to receive dividends over time while your money stays in the stock so you are earning that income over time while the stock price itself will change over time just like a normal stock. So you still have the option of selling your shares if the stock price goes up, but while you are waiting for that you are also earning additional income through the dividends, whereas with a growth stock you don't make anything until you decide to sell or you borrow money against your stock. Unless you are doing trading vs investing I would prefer the dividends so that I can continue to make money that I can then re-invest or save at my discretion without having to sell my shares than waiting around and hoping the stock price stays high for when I eventually decide to sell.
This one is exactly the type of arguments that only somebody that doesn’t understand the math would do… You can do the exact same thing, selling part of the shares of the company, every $1 of dividend you receive is $1 the company value would have increased… so if you sell $1 of share, you are in the exact same situation the dividend investor is in….. That’s not an advantage at all…
@@raffaelepiccini3405 This sounds like an argument that someone who doesn't understand what dividend stocks are would make. With a dividend paying stock it doesn't matter whether or not the price increases, goes sideways or loses value. With a dividend company you are paid no matter what the stock is doing, it doesn't have to gain value for you to get your share. What you are earning is a portion of the company profits either each month or each quarter depending on how your dividend stock is set up. If you just straight up buy normal stock price HAS to increase in value otherwise you make nothing. But with dividend stocks you can continue to make profit even if price stays the same WITHOUT selling any of your stock. The best overall setup is investing in a company who not only will have an increase in value in their stock price over time, but will also pay you dividends while you wait. You are getting paid to hold the stock, so why would you go for growth only stocks vs dividend stocks? The "math" is clearly in favor of dividends in the long term.
@@magickmynd1296when dividends are paid the cost of the dividends counts against the stock price. So if the price stays the same on the dividend stock that means the price should have gone up by the amount of the dividend that was paid.
Another way of looking at dividends is that the management is forcing you to sell X% every year whether you like it or not and you have to reinvest if you want to keep your position.
@DobesVandermeer that’s not true at all. Your ownership stake stays the same whether you reinvest or not. If you reinvest you get more ownership than you did before
Good points! I think dividend investors are focused on building an army of shares that increase their dividends over time. So they aren't as concerned with share price as they are with the share outputs -- more like a real business owner, as you put it. Having said that, good growth stocks can increase in value far more quickly than, say, SCHD. I like to emphasize dividends but include a smaller amount of growth stocks as potential boosters.
I'm a dividend investor here in Australia and over the last 5 years my share growth has been between 70 to 80% depending on the stock plus I got Dividends.
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
I’m so happy that this video exists. Finally someone who gets it !!!! - selling shares is not the same as a dividend - the drop in share price is relative to the movement of that day and the movement of the market in general, it’s not guaranteed loss of the share price. It can recover, it might not. Not it’s not guaranteed lost value. - you maintain equity and get cash to do with as you wish :)
A dividend is exactly the same as selling shares after a stock buyback. At the end, the company is less valuable and your stake in the company is the same, whereas if you had held through the buyback / reinvested the dividend, you would've increased your stake.
If your dividends are automatically reinvested into buying stocks, there's no reason a company should fear issuing dividends (it's basically reinvesting in your business, to an extent). There are enough people buying stocks to subsidize the people who are not buying more stocks. The other fact of the matter is that if your company is worth buying its stocks, then they are likely making a sizeable profit and incentivizing people to buy their stocks whether a dividend is issued or not. Costco and Moody's have risen more than 20% thus far this year. That's fantastic, dividend stock or otherwise. Automatic reinvesting also means that investors don't really need to think about their investments except to make sure they are still seeing a return from time to time. If you are worried about losing money because you weren't "paying attention" to your stocks, then you aren't very confident in the long-term viability of your companies.
As you become older you rely on income streams…finding the highest quality consistent income stream that’s taxed the least…capital appreciation isn’t as important
Excellent discussion. Long term growth investor here. I deal with the emotional risks of market swings by NOT looking. I check my portfolio twice a year max. My time horizon is always 30+ years. I've averaged 13.6% annual return for 30+ years. Sure, the worst year dropped 40%. But I don't look and the loss is only a paper loss. You've convinced me that a value/dividend fund would add something to my portfolio. Thanks!
I appreciate your calm and detached analysis, and the fact that you never “bash” any type of strategy. I’m nearing retirement, and my portfolio has three legs. Some pure growth, some dividend growth and some income in the form of BDCs. My total return might not outperform the S&P, but I sleep well 😁
I really really really really really hope that you have some of your retirement money outside of companies and the stock market. We may be heading for a huge decline. This is not financial advice because you need to make your own decisions. But go listen to a recent interview with Jeremy Grantham and then make whatever decisions seem the best for you.
@@geoffgjof Lol, Jeremy Grantham, who has predicted 25 out of the last 2 market crashes? I'm not saying it couldn't happen but that guy has perma-bear written all over him. I also don't necessarily listen to the perma-bulls either but listening to big daddy Buffett who says we should be in the market through thick and thin, sounds like homeboy has his bases covered with some dividend growth paying him regularly as well as BDCs for a little bigger income. If it all tanks then we're all screwed anyway, so cheers!
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
Thanks for sharing your perspective on dividend investing :) About the arguments: I think the most important one is the motivation and happiness that comes with it for a lot of investors, which is one of the most important parts of life anyways. So if it makes anyone happy investing in a dividend portfolio, i would say go for it, happiness is worth a lot in my books. On the other hand, i still don't see the point of being able to receive a steady plannable income, even in downturns, since that is still the same for non-dividend paying stocks as well (after all the dividend comes out of the share price, so you could just sell the equivalent amount in shares). Another point i want to make is that i personally would not like to be invested into companies that i don't trust to handle the money better than myself. If i think i can outperform the company i am invested in by collecting dividends from them and investing them elsewhere, then maybe i should not be invested in that company after all. Those are just my thought, i personally mostly follow an empirical approach of a factor tilted broadly diversified portfolio.
Thanks for responding, glad you watched this one. I totally understand your thought process on “only investing in companies I trust to allocate profits” - makes perfect sense. The emotional aspect is a big part because it’s not just about making people happy but a key part in being successful at this. It’s easy to get caught up in the swings and dividend payments help greatly with that. The argument about “equivalent amount of shares can be sold” assumes all opportunities are equal, part of what I hoped to show is that the idea works in theory but you still have to apply it to specific companies to make it work. And companies are always unique and “unequal” to each other. Anyway, I appreciate your perspective, thanks!
The thing to realise is that a lot of divident stocks are not so just because they are set up poorly, but rather because they have such a large market share already that there is serious diminishing returns on investing more in their own sector. Sure they can invest in other markets experimentally, but they likely do not have as much of an advantage there compared to other companies built around those areas, so the expected growth would also be mediocre. In such a case it makes a lot of sense to simply just say "we are going to return a fraction of the profits as divident", as you are effectively harvesting the majority of the value in a sector already. For instance I would be much more interested in buying compariably priced shares of Amazons cloud solution rather than the entire amazon package, and just get dividents from that part of their buisness, the rest of the buisness does increase the value of their stock because it does give additional profit, but the profit per investment required in their cloud part is vastly higher, and as such I expect that I could get a higher return per investment on just their cloud buisness, at least if I can buy it before the stock prices adjust accordingly.
I'm so happy i discovered dividend investing. I have two babies and i feel great knowing i will help them even after I'm gone. They won't have to sell shares, they'll just collect dividends and hopefully they'll never have to sell, and pass it down to their kids
Dividend stocks can be like growth stocks if you use DRIP. You simply reinvest the divs into the same stock. Instead of relying on a growth stock price per share to increase, you are increasing the amount of shares you have. Both result in the same "growth", but Dividends come with the option of you having control over it. Another benefit is qualified dividends can be had at lower or no tax (depending on income) to money made from selling shares (especially if you didn't hold them for at least a year). So depending on your income you can be getting dividends tax free, then you can reinvest those dividends in the same stock and that counts as paid purchase come capitol gain/lose time when you do sell. A growth stock that you bought $50 worth of and you sold them for $100 means a $50 gain come tax time. A div stock you bought $50 worth of and you used DRIP to increase your shares so that it totaled $100 when you sold those shares would not be a $50 gain, but would take into account the total purchases (initial $50 plus all DRIP purchases). This meaning the Gain you pay will be much less come tax time.
Great explanation and balanced view of the 2 investing styles. Of the 3 vangard funds, VIGAX had the highest Sharpe ratio. So while returns were more erratic, the returns were better even after factoring in volatility. But the higher sharpe ratio, while being greater, wasn't enormously better, and that also changes over time periods.
THANK YOU for the informative video. On the part where you talk about the CAGR are you counting the reinvestment of dividends? That is the part that confuses me when looking at overall growth stocks versus dividend-investing stocks. Should we count the reinvestment of dividends into that calculation?
it includes dividend reinvestment. In terms of "should we" it really depends on your situation. If you're using the income to live then probably not. If you're reinvesting for long-term growth - then probably yes?
Very eloquently put! A lot of examples reminded me of my own journey riding the growth stocks wave and watching them plummet (esp. tech). To balance the sanity and still not loose out on gains, I do 80/20 div & growth. Overall outcome is above average performance than index and also sleep at night factor
Thank you for a very good clear explanation. At 61 years old I've been investing for circa 20 years and I have always had a mixed portfolio of growth and dividend stocks and reinvested dividends for further growth, except when I have needed cashflow when I simply stopped the reinvestment and took the cash. Knowing what your dividend stream is going to be is a huge lifestyle enabler for me. As I get older I am moving to a more dividend based portfolio replacing the growth stocks with dividend stocks as market opportunities arise to guarantee that income and avoid worries of fluctuations on the stock price that would ensue if I had to sell the growth stocks for income..
Great video Matt.... I think it's all about your personal goals, which ours is trying to maximize passive income without selling the principal (stocks or funds) so we'll have a larger inheritance to pass on.
As a dividend investor, I agree 100%. I would like emphasize the importance of not using dividends as income when youre just starting to build a portfolio, but reinvesting them to buy more dividends.
While there might be some purely emotional/psychological reasons to favor dividends, there's no practical reason to. Planning withdrawals around dividends is a sub-optimal variable withdrawal strategy. If the stock price is down and you take dividends as cash, it has the same practical effect on your balance as selling the equivalent amount in shares. A better variable withdrawal strategy is to make withdrawals after shares have done well recently regardless of whether that means taking dividends as cash or selling shares.
For some dividend investors, it doesn't matter what the stock price does as long as the company earnings are enough to be able to keep paying the dividend to cover your living expenses. You're greater concern is how many shares can I accumulate, not what can I sell them for. Share prices will fluctuate based on what's happening in the economy and what the news tells us (even if earnings are solid, the market often over reacts to what they see on TV). When you're buying dividend stocks of companies that you know are going to be around for the long haul, you stop worrying about the share price sit back and collect your dividends. Maybe sell some out-of-the-money covered calls on positions to increase income.
@@BrianNC81 That makes absolutely no practical sense. Total balance and total return is all that matters. Whether you have 100 shares valued at $50 per share or 50 shares valued at $100 per share, the total value is $500. There's no reason to assume dividend companies are more likely to be around for the 'long haul'. If company issues a dividend after its share price drops the share price will drop even further, proportionate to the dividend. Any perceived inherent advantage of dividend stocks is illusory.
@@alankoslowski9473 You cant assume that any company is there for the "long haul". Also selling share requires you to have a "lot of shares" to sell off in the end. I have an ETF that distributes and one that doesn't and both are for later. Also I have single stocks on the side, some stocks I dont pay any taxes on the dividens thanks to the company tax optimisation, but I will pay these taxes indirectly when selling the stocks. In the end the persons choice to make in what they want to invest. I also hope everyone will have constant positive returns of their investment. :)
It’s a pretty simple concept actually - the dividend paying stock forces you to pay tax. While the non-dividend paying company doesn’t. That forced tax comes with the benefit of being able to allocate your share of the profits however you want without selling part of your ownership stake. Can you sell shares? Of course. That’s a choice you make. Dividends and tax on dividends happen without your input.
@@Kralnor I didn’t though because I addressed it in the video and in countless responses to comments on the video as well. His point is that selling shares in the same dollar amount as the potential dividend is equivalent. It is not.
Here in Australia many companies issue dividends with something called franking credits. These credits are for the tax that the company has paid on their profits, which reduces or eliminates the tax that the shareholder has to pay on the income.
Sometimes people find it difficult to sell shares of stocks even after it garners healthy returns, either because of greed of further upside or becoming emotionally attached to the script. Dividend becomes a systematic withdrawal plan in these scenarios and protects capital.
wrong. dividends is just a way to thank your investors for the money invested, but penalize them hardly. it is better to keep the money and invest it or buy-back stocks.
Depends on your situation. If you need a regular income to live, then regular dividends are good. When the stock market blows out 20 or 30% in a month and 60% in a couple of years you're happy to get your dividends year after year. The cash you get from the dividends is real, the value of the share is just indicative until the day you sell. The stock market went down 20% in coupke of months ant it may get worse. Still got my dividends. Value is good when you need to grow your capital. Then dividend is good when you actually need the money. Especially if you're in country where the value of shares has not beengrowing for years if not decades.
Great balanced approach! Love the fact you’re selling what I would consider as a quality balanced nuanced mindset, rather than panic or drama. I’ll be coming back to watch more videos!
Balanced approach my ass. Just the first section alone, doesn't even disputes that dividends lower the stock, but rather argues they are better than stock buybacks. There are many ways the underlaying company can reinvest the cash, and most of the times it won't be stock buybacks, so centering it around that is just a garbage counterpoint. He commits a lot of these fallacies throughout and never actually shows how dividend portfolios overperform a market portfolio.
You clearly watched the video attached to some bias. The video doesn’t claim “dividends are better” at all. Quite the opposite actually. But you’d have to actually watch the video without assuming you already know what it’s going to say I guess
As a former stockbroker IN PRACTICE I rarely saw a stock price decrease after paying a dividend, and if the price did get reset after a dividend payout, it was a matter of seconds it would snap back to the pre-payout price, unless the whole market was having a down day.
Yeah even if the bid/ask starts there at the beginning of the trading day, it immediately changes due to normal market factors. That's why I never really understood people's focus on that criticism
@@mattderron It's a silly critique. The price dropping makes people want to buy more, raising the price back to the old level almost instantly. Plenty of dividend stocks hold firm their price while paying out 8% or more dividends/year, and have been doing so for years.
Exactly and I think one aspect that frequently gets overlooked is that the dividend was actual cash in hand to the investor. So they are getting the advantage of actual cash plus normal market movements which tend to go higher over time (generalization)
I question the veracity of this comment. I hold broadly diversified index ETFs. When they pay a dividend the share price always drops proportionately to the dividend. It doesn't instantly recover. It doesn't necessarily recover the next day or week or month. It just fluctuates concurrently with the market as expected.
My current style of stocks screening is, plain fundamental analysis. Then after sorted out, my focus are on equity annual growth, RoE stability and sustainable growth rate SGR = RoE x (1-DPR). As long as both of these factors have satisfying value, whether that is dividend paying, growth, or even value stocks, honestly i don't really care.
I agree with you. I have always liked dividends or companies buying back stock. When I see how much cash on hand some of these companies hold, it blows my mind. All it does it makes management push for higher growth rates. Sometimes that isn't practical. Assuming that all industries will grow at high rates all the time isn't realistic. When you get that cash out it will relive management from excessive stress to grow. Especially good idea if the economy is slowing down.
I agree there is likely a shift in mindset when it comes to a company becoming a consistent dividend payer. Some just handle it better than others obviously
Something about having something directly from your investment also has appeal. If a company has difficulty going forward for some reason, you can have some assurance that at least I had received something. Ideally, I think half of earnings should be distributed. Of course, many factors need to be considered.
Good video my friend. The problem with any stock investing is the inevitable crash that occurs and that’s usually worse for growth stocks. So dividend stocks always give you the chance to reinvest the dividends at lower stock prices. But for me the big psychological issue is being 100% in stocks. Ben Graham recommended a 50/50 stock/bond portfolio but I think bonds are unreliable so I use cash instead. And then rebalance every 3-6 months. So if there is a crash you have half your investment in cash ready to buy cheap stocks. I don’t know if this improves returns but it’s easier to sleep at night and to keep investing. Imagine investing for 30 years and then watching a 500,000 dollar or U.K. Pounds investment drop to 250,000 or lower. If half of your investment was in cash you would only drop to 375,000 and 250,000 of that would be in cash, giving you the opportunity to buy cheap stocks. Rebalancing means you would buy stocks for 62,500 with totals of 187,500 in stocks and the cash balance reduced to 187,500. Sometimes , stocks don’t recover for a decade so I prefer this approach. I also split my stock investment 50/50 between growth and dividend ETFs .
Here in Canada we have a tfsa account which stands for a tax-free savings so if you were 18 years old in 2009 your total contribution limit to your tfsa would be $102,000. 102,000 worth of companies that were dividend paying any dividends earned in that tfsa count are tax-free on your Canadian income tax. Now if you have dividend companies from the United States in your tfsa the US automatically takes a 15% withholdings tax. I've been doing the math though it's still pretty worth it depending on the dividend you're getting for example there's some high yield ETFs out there.
It’s baffling how nay sayers keep repeating like broken record that dividends don’t work and aren’t real 😂 there’s literally 100s of examples on RUclips proving them wrong
The trick is to determine the difference between investments and speculations. Most people buying stocks think they are investing, but are actually speculating. Huge difference. Nice video.
Subscribed. Loved your calm and logical vibe. It would be good to adjust for inflation (and not just cpi). Nominal dividend returns before tax look great. Real dividend returns post tax and inflation, can look terrible if your goal is good, car, housing etc
Thanks I appreciate it! In terms of how I account for inflation, in general it's in my portfolio strategy. I'm looking for companies who provide dividend growth greater than the rate of inflation, so basically I'm targeting the dividends that hopefully outpace it over time.
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
Nice video! I think the biggest issue people who don't engage in dividend growth investing have with it is that it takes a lloonngg time to start seeing some real growth. I'm a big fan of dividend growth investing and have been doing it for less than 10r years, and although my portfolio is growing at an exponential rate, that rate isn't yet high enough to turn heads. Focusing on the art of finding stock that pay the best yield on cost, I KNOW eventually it'll be bananas, it just isn't yet. There are a lot of pro's to dividend growth investing, but the main point I use when anyone asks me why I use that approach is: I'm getting paid to literally just hold the shares.
I understand your point, and can definitely be true depending on what someone's goals are as an investor - but Pepsi also spends $800M / year on R&D so even they think they need to be researching new ideas 🤷🏻♂️
most of what passes for "new ideas" these days is just buying someone else out. it's just the "conglomerate" grift from the 70s coming 'round again now that everybody who experienced it the first time has died.
Difference is companies like Intel have started their turn around as expected. T would be a better example as they have only gone down since the cut and split
Exactly. Is a company “paying” a high dividend yield because it is in trouble, with the stock price falling significantly whilst they have not yet announced that the dividend has been cut? Need to do your research…
Another alternative to buyback is to payback debt which rewards all shareholders equally. The improve balance sheet will attract investors driving up the stock prices.
Another potential benefit of dividend investing, specifically when you're re-investing that capital, is the fact that you're raising your cost basis over time (assuming your portfolio's going up over time). If you ever do need to sell equity, you capital gains will be smaller, and thus your tax for that year will be smaller, as you've essentially paid a portion of it ahead of time. This can be a huge help if you do have to liquidate a large amount at once due to unforeseen circumstances.
2:45 Why would you be invested in a company, if you do not want to reinvest the dividends in that company? 4:30 Why would dividend show stability of business model? Many companies gives out dividends that they borrow money for, while the company is not profitable, Dividends are not part of profits, it is just any money the comapny decides.
Because I prefer to take my dividends in cash so I can reinvest in the companies at the best valuation IMO at the time. It's not that I don't like the company, but it may not be at an attraction valuation compared to others in my portfolio at that time. Nothing wrong with DRIP though if people prefer that. Dividends show stability since the business has to be able to continue to earn enough to pay out. Yes they can use debt and many companies do as a capital allocation strategy (not all) but ultimately that debt shows up in their fundamentals as well. But I think saying they are "unprofitable" is wrong. Obviously every company needs to be judged on their own merits (a major point in the video) but if a company is a consistent dividend payer they've reached a maturity in their business - I don't think that is controversial to say at all.
@@mattderron you just made my point. Why keep being invested in company A paying dividends, if there is company B and C you want to invest your dividend to? "Dividends show stability since the business has to be able to continue to earn enough to pay out". That is just wrong, for example you can have a company that just issues new shares and then pays dividend from that without any business at all. There are penny stocks that basically do just that, except they pretend that they have unprofitable business.
No I didn't make your point - just because I feel like other companies in my portfolio are at more attractive valuations right now doesn't mean I don't like the first company long-term still. This is just allocating new capital to the most attractive option at the time, not changing all of your invested capital every quarter...very simple concept. Sure, you can pick out examples of companies that pay dividends that are terrible and not worthy of investment. I've said multiple times in the video and in this comment thread that each company needs to be evaluated on its own merits. However - if you don't believe that in general dividend companies are more stable than non-dividend payers, then I don't know what else to tell you. To each their own. Good luck to you.
@@mattderron If you say, that you recieve dividends from a portfolio and your dividend company is not worth investing, then it is not worth investing and you should sell it. It is true that there is correlation between profitable company with dividend and stability. That is because most managment of companies are not idiots and when their company goes bancrupt and stops being stable, they stop issuing dividend and when everything is great they start issuing dividend. Saying that dividend companies are stable is a Hindsight bias. Also unprofitable companies with dividends are not more stable then unprofitable companies without dividends.
I'll try this one more time and hopefully it helps, but if you truly just don't want to see it, then there's nothing I can do and we're just wasting our time. When you put new money into your brokerage account - do you buy every stock or ETF you have evenly every time? Or do you buy whatever you think is the best value at the moment? If you're not willing to buy every single thing in an even amount then it must mean you don't feel like it's worth investing in anymore and you should sell? Do you see how ridiculous this point of view is?
The thing about the price dropping after the dividend is declared is offset, in whole or in part, by the price bump that a stock will see in the days leading up to the ex-dividend date when a dividend, or other distribution, is announced. There are investors who don't buy and hold dividend stocks. They will pile in during the last few days before the stock goes ex-dividend, then sell when they become the shareholder of record for the dividend, then pile into the next dividend stock on their dividend calendar. They float from stock to stock, like a bee in a field of flowers, qualifying for the dividend, then moving on. You are collecting multiple dividends with the same money. You can easily double your money over the course of a year. Not many growth stocks can match that rate of return.
I prefer divs. If I can average 5-9% Div payments (especially monthly paying) for the rest of my life, then my kids lives and theirs after that, that’s the definition of a family legacy. Building family wealth. Every dollar that comes back that you don’t have to put time into earning is so valuable. If your portfolio never has to be liquidated to be able to use that money then how can you lose? BUT at the end of the day there as so many ways to build wealth. To each his own
You are 100% right! If your timeline is long, you can buy some dividends but growth matters. But that doesn't mean you can't start tracking the income your portfolio generates! 💪🏻
The other thing to keep in mind is that just because the company doesn't pay a dividend doesn't necessarily mean it's reinvesting more in itself than a company that does pay a dividend. The company that pays the dividend might be more profitable overall, perhaps even having more money to reinvest in itself even after paying the dividend. Moreover, just because a company is reinvesting the cash doesn't mean they are doing so wisely. Even if you think the company has a strong core business, perhaps the reinvest is going towards some misguided pet project of the CEO or something like that.
I mean, I could buy stocks for dividends and only pay 25% tax on them, or I can buy stocks for growth, which I need to sell for 4,90+0,25% and pay 25% tax on what I gained. Meaning I am always at a disadvantage when needing to sell. Selling also means you will hamper your growth potential by x shares, while dividends just pay out what is supposedly superfluous anyways. Those are a lot of things growth would need to compensate to create any form of consistent income.
You can always take a loan when you need to front a project and use dividends to pay your monthly payments which nobody talks about. I dont want to always "sell stocks" and wait to invest in down years.
@@ryebread447 any loans interest free cc, any loan under 6% is considered good credit. I put my yearly expenses on an interest free cc every year about 10-15k, invest the money and pay off the card with dividends. This allows me to put the money into the market faster. Basically covers one month of that cc payment doing it this way.
Great info! I have a question: One of my 401k funds (target date) were converted from a fund that distributed dividends annually (and then reinvested into the fund, increasing my share count), to a fund that retains the dividends and lets the dividends earned contribute to the value of the fund. How can I analyze which is better? I don't like the idea of not getting additional shares via dividend disbursement and having faith that the fund's appreciation is going to offset that. Any thoughts on this? Thanks!
@@mattderron Yeah, neither do I. I think the argument was it's better to keep the dividends proceeds pooled in the fund rather than distribute them in a prorated way to the individual fund owners.
Thank you for making this video. It presents the ideas and facts I was often presenting to the "dividend haters" on an investing heads site. My father would never have wanted to have to decide from a portfolio of stocks which ones to sell and which ones to keep at any given point in time, or how many shares to sell, or exactly when to sell them. Dividends rolled in. It was automatic. He held onto his shares, year after year after year. He really was more like an owner than a trader. Emotionally, psychologically, and economically, holding dividend paying stocks (or mutual funds and ETFs) makes a lot of sense for some investors.
Thank you. I am primarily a dividend investor, based on original purchase prices I’m receiving a 7.8% dividend, I’m happy with that and I never need to sell the shares, could I make more on growth stocks, sure but I’d have to sell shares when I need income price high or low. Tax on dividends is low here based on income
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
You buy shares with a 1% dividend yield for 1,000 euros. That means a cash flow of 10 euros. Both multiply tenfold and you have 10,000 euros in your portfolio. The personal dividend yield is now 10%, but it is still only 100 euros for a position of 10,000 euros. Now one sells the position, after taxes remain approx. 7,500 euro cash and of it one buys shares, a company with 3% current dividend yield. Then you have a cash flow of 225 Euro. That is 125% more than with 10% personal dividend yield. So what is the use of a 10% personal dividend yield that you had before?
Just to be clear. Tax isn't the price of flexibility. Tax is the price of government. The same system would work without tax as it does in a tax free account. 2:45 You are conflating relation between two things that happen at the same time (Flexibility and Tax). You aren't paying for flexibility.
Obviously there are always nuances when it comes to taxes. Even in a taxable account if you have qualified dividends and are under the income thresholds, you won't pay any tax either. But in a taxable account where you decide to invest in a company that distributes profits back to shareholders that gets recognized as income - many are paying taxes on those dividends. I was merely trying to show that getting your share of company profits in cash comes with the benefit of flexibility and the expense of tax. We could argue all day on the actual usefulness of government and their allocation of our money - if you've seen some of my other videos you might already know how I feel about that.
I am happy you pointed out the virtues of both styles of investing. Most of the dividend investing videos I watch don't do that. They talk about dividend investing as if that's only style of investing people should do when the fact is most people would benefit from both. Dividend investing works really well when you're saving for retirement which most of us are. Growth works really well when you're saving for a specific goal like a down payment on a house. This is why I invest in both kinds of stocks. If I only invested in dividend stocks I would have to sell some of them when I go to buy a house, and I don't ever want to sell my dividend stocks. That defeats the purpose of investing in dividends.
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
Good info, not what I was expecting. A lot of other problems between the two vary with one's income level and taxes. With dividends, you're taxed annually but if taken a a lump sum by selling a growth stock it could make income over some IRS tax limit potentially limiting contributions to tax free accounts.. Qualified dividends pay less than high yield dividends but at a low income level they are not taxed. But at higher income levels they are taxed at a higher rate and that makes them then less valuable than high yield dividends. The truest metric is total return after taxes for one's specific income level in the current and near term future.
What I like about dividend payouts is that it forces me to take profits every so often. The company pays out a dividend and it appears on my balance. My personality is mostly a "just hold onto it, it'll return to green" for downturns coupled with "hold longer, it's probably going to go higher still". While I think the opposite is even worse, people who sell imediatly whenever the price turns down and take profits the moment growth exceeds 3 %, I tend to pass up opportunities because I'm reluctant to liquidate positions. And the last point about emotions is critical. None of this behavior is rational. There's no reason to be "loyal" to the stocks you buy. I can sell them at any time for relatively low cost, basically just the ask / bid difference. But I do avoid the 15 to 20 dollar loss, even though an opportunity that would possibly make me a few hundred dollars is available. A dividend stock pays me every so often and I can't be the usual "just hold longer" because on the Ex Dividend day, I get the money regardless wether I want it or not.
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
I'm a growth investor, but you made some very good data-based arguments. I'll be thinking about whether my portfolio needs any modifications. Thank you for challenging my thinking 😊👏🙏
Great stuff Matt! Another statistic that supports the case is that dividend stocks match the performance of the S&P over long periods of time and dividend growers outperform the S&P by like 2% over long periods.
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
I personally prefer to receive money in my account without needing to sell anything. Instead of selling to receive money I buy more shares constantly to receive more dividends each year. We can do that forever and pass to future generations. Also market wont go up forever and in times of crisis you still get your dividends. Selling to receive money is my worst nightmare 😂
Excellent summary and great points about volatility. The real challenge I think most investors face during their investment lifetime is limiting emotional decisions.
You should also mention the tax aspect of dividends. Not only do dividends gets taxed at the company level before it's distributed to you, unless you invest these in a tax sheltered account, you get taxed again on the individual income level. I think smart investors should just invest in individual companies and analyze them case by case and not put yourself into the growth investor or the dividend investor categories. For every Amazon and Google, there are hundreds of Pelotons, and for dividends, there are also plenty of dividend paying value trap companies to avoid.
The tax aspects are really misleading to many. You usually have millionaires talk about it more, because higher income brackets are more affected by it than anyone, and it just doesn't match up with the vast majority of people who will not actually pay what millionaires do in taxes. Qualified dividends aren't even taxed for the first $44,625 you earn. In retirement, if you include that plus social security which also isn't taxed, you can actually live quite comfortably without paying any taxes on your income. Regardless though, how many people do you know investing in the markets right now that actually makes that much/yr just from dividends? So over most of your dividend investment career you're not going to be paying any taxes on that. It's only in retirement when your nest egg has grown to a point where you actually are making that much, where you will begin to pay taxes, and it's only 15% of anything earning in excess of $44,625, up to $492,301, where it will begin to change to 20%. Now do you know anyone making $492,301/yr in dividends? Probably not. In your retirement age, after having spent 30+ years working paying nearly 30% of your income your whole life, are you going to be upset paying 15% of your dividend income you no longer need to work for? Mentally, you couldn't give a shit because that money is going right into your bank account and paying all your bills, work-free. In comparison, watching you lose 80k in a week because the president said they were going to do X and thus that causes the markets to crash, how do you think you'd feel mentally in retirement? And regardless, whenever you sell, you still have to pay taxes on your capital gains, so you're just waiting for later to pay taxes anyway on your growth stocks. It's not like it's not taxed when you actually want to harvest your gains to use said money to, you know, live. Most people who do invest in dividends aren't going to give 2 shits if they could have made 2% more/yr investing everything in growth as they fall asleep next to their bags of dividend money. Besides you should have a mix of both anyway, but regardless, this was just to point out how dumb the whole "tax problem" with dividends is, because the majority of people who do invest aren't going to be paying any for a very long time. And it's not like growth stocks don't need to pay taxes when they actually are selling their shares.
You get taxed when you cash in your growth too so you aren't saving on taxes just adjusting the timing. You may get better tax-adjusted returns with dividends because you are spreading your income over many years (depending on your specific bracket and whether they are qualified dividends or not).
@@BlackPaladin2 Correct, you have to pay taxes later when you sell, the emphasis is on later and in the meantime the tax deferral effect can continue to work, which is limited with mandatory payments on dividends. "Most people who do invest in dividends aren't going to give 2 shits if they could have made 2% more/yr investing everything in growth as they fall asleep next to their bags of dividend money." Do you know most people?
You certainly make good points and are level headed. I'll admit I am one of those people who generally warn new investors away from buying dividend yielding funds "for the dividends" with the types of comments you said are often given. Even after watching your video though I would say that on the average growth stocks outperform dividend stocks. That is not to say you should never buy dividend stocks, dividend stocks tend to be much less volatile....so its a good way to mitigate volatility as you approach retirement. I would still caution a young investor away from prioritizing dividend yielding stocks though. I also wouldnt prioritize growth over dividends. I would just prioritize total return, diversity across sectors and later on in investing reduced volatility which will probably include value funds.
This kind of video is what I like the most about your channel. These broader issues about investing. I'm struggling exactly about this issue: pros and cons of different investment strategies, thinking of the long term.
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
Totally depends. Here in Germany you have around 1000€ per year tax free in either stock earnings, dividends or whatever. So it actually is sensible to realize either some winnings or just cash in dividends. Also a lot of companies offer to pay dividends in additional stock which might be attractive as well. I use dividends for the tax break, personally and then reinvest. I also like the option (in the far future) to live off my dividends and let them trickle in over the course of the year instead of selling chunks of my stocks. But that's just personal "flavor" I think
I definitely think one of the bigger challenges is knowing when to sell in those cases. I always struggled with that. Part of why I enjoy dividend growers that are also great companies. The plan is to hold until their story changes and get paid along the way.
@@justinjohnson8398 Oy. You have $1B in stock you could borrow against if you refuse to sell. Or you could have other investments. But ok, extreme examples though that apply to practically nobody on the planet.
Yesterday, Halloween, the market happened to be off and I "lost" over 1% Today, the 1st of the month, I realized $ 1200+ in dividends and interest. Tonight I will sleep soundly.
This is why it’s important to invest in preferred shares if you want to collect dividend and common stock if you want growth. Alternatively Index funds are the next best options.
There are numerous ways to be involved with the stock market. For the younger crowd, it makes sense to be long in growth stocks. For someone like me, pushing 60 and only recently acquiring enough money to work with, I am more concerned with a steady income stream. Having a portfolio of (non-dividend) growth stocks will not pay my monthly bills. Comparing the the two groups is like comparing apples/oranges. Those that look negatively on dividend stocks aren't considering the fact that many use portfolios of dividend stocks for income streams. You can't lump everyone into one single category and say, "this is the best way to invest your money", or "this is the best stock to own". Personally, I have a nice portfolio of solid dividend stocks that are currently averaging 5%. I sell calls (conservatively), which allows me to add another 2%-3%.
Great points throughout this video. The bottom line is always, discipline and have a plan. Always dollar cost average. Do not try to time the market. Buy what you know. If you wouldn't own that stock for a decade, you shouldn't own it for a day.
well if from 2007 to 2023 is 26 years to you… maybe you can’t do math.
😂 yeah you're right - wow lol
@@mattderron lol. Good to see you have a sense of humor. Well, we all make mistakes and we all have different opinions. Most people are not 100% correct or 100% wrong. I personally focus on total returns, not how high a fund or stocks dividend percentage is.
Total return is critical, we definitely agree there.
In terms of the mistake - I mean it’s just too funny because of the topic and thumbnail of the video 😂. As long as people can still get value from the content it’s all good if I screwed up simple math like everyone says lol
@@mattderronyour video, including the error, is one of the best video's I have seen on (dividend) investing in a while. You explain everything clearly and you stay neutral all the way. Thank you. Marked for rewatching in a few years with my daughters 👍🏻.
Thank you so much, that’s amazing! I really appreciate the kind words
Fun fact: here in Brazil local investors' dividends are not taxed whatsoever, so most companies just pay huge amounts of their profits (25-50%) directly to the shareholders. The companies that pay the most dividends are often the ones that offer greater returns to the shareholders overall, so pretty much half of the people who do buy&hold are dividend investors over here, and it has been a very successful strategy over the last 40 years or so
That's amazing, did not know it worked like that in Brazil!
I as a foreigner holding a bunch of CBD and Petrobras, pay 20% of the dividends to Brazil. Enjoy my money buddy
@@ironrye4317 Um fato curioso é que menos de 2% das pessoas jurídicas investem na bolsa ou em algum meio de investimentos privado. Os brasileiros não tem educação financeira e nem ao menos tem consciência disso. Isso reflete em pobreza demasiada conservada pelo poder público
@@ironrye4317seems like you like to lose money
@@mattderronthe tax rate on companies is higher in Brazil than in the US. We are in the middle of a tax system reform. There was an ideia that dividends were going to be taxed and the tax rate for comapnies would be reduced in order to keep the overall taxation in the economy the same. I am not very optimistic. Too many unknowables but I think dividends will eventually be taxed.
This is the best summary of the debate between "dividend investing" and "growth investing" I have ever seen. Nice work.
Thanks!
Fully agree 👍
Totally agree, great summary
Agreed
No it's not.
Google comes to you and says we are selling shares, and plan to never pay dividend. But you can sell to greater fool. So everyone is relying on another idiot to come along and pay more. This is not sustainable to make money beyond inflation. It basically works like a ponzi asset.
Also the myth that a dividend lowers stock price is repeated by fools.
This is honestly one of the best videos I've seen on dividend investing.
Not just mindlessly claiming outperformance, but instead highlighting the psychological impact is really refreshing to see.
Thank you I appreciate it!!
Excellent conclusion, I fully agree.
I'm a small scale investor (something like 6k or so spread out over the course of about 4-5 years) and i don't have much working knowledge on the subject, but when i first started i figured "well i can sell if needed, but if the company will essentially pay me to hold and invest, it's a win/win".
Granted my total dividends yield after all this time is maybe a couple hundred dollars so there isn't /much/ benefit so far, but its there
Slowly but surely
Everyone Has a Plan Until They Get Punched in the Mouth. Everyone says 4% rule until they see a 50% decline over multiple years. When you are in retirement and rely on your assets for income, you do not want to be facing a 2008/2009 situation that may ultimately put you back into the workforce.
My golden is rule is, do I have enough for retirement and live the way I want? Now double it. I will not retire before I reach that 200% goal.
Facts💯
But what does that have to do with the dividend argument? I can just restate the same thing again and again, selling shares is the same as collecting dividends even in downturns, so if you can not count on selling shares for retirement, you also can not count on dividends.
@@larsleo7059 Not exactly. Selling shares put downward presser on the price of a stock. In the same way that buying shares will put upward presser on the stock. Will one person selling 100 shares of Amazon make a difference, no.
Free cash flow in many ways is more important to look at than "value" or "growth"
Have you heard of bonds? Have you heard of portfolio rebalancing? Look into it.
I think of the "dividend is no free money" argument like this: You have a cow that produces milk. When you take milk from the cow, it loses weight, but obviously, it will continue to produce milk, therefore the cow is the important part. Always have good cows! (And also, being a Brazilian investor makes me a natural dividend defender)
Plus dairy cattle is raised differently from beef cattle. If a company pays consistent dividends that tells you something about HOW they are being run, compared to something that can swing wildly at the whim/tweet of its CEO.
Exaaactly!!!
Great analogy. Not only will the cow continue to produce milk, it will likely regain whatever (little) weight was lost provided it remains healthy.
To stay in the analogy: on the other hand there is a cow that does not produce milk but instead gets offspring a lot faster than the milk giving cow. If you need the money, you can still sell the offspring and have the same amount of cow that the other guy with the milk giving cow has.
@@keineangabe8993 that would be more like having a cow that grows fast, and when you need money you sell a part of the cow and hopefully it grows back 😅
Voice is calm but modulated, easy to listen to. Analysis is fair and nuanced. Well done.
Thank you!
I am now retired. Prior to retirement I purchased a chunk on SCHD. The stock price has dropped to the point that last year that investment was down around 3 thousand dollars. Not a happy camper when I compared that to my NASDAQ indexed fund. Then i looked at the dividends and capital gains and realized that SCHD had distributed around 3 thousan dollars. Since I dont plan on selling anytime soon I felt a lot better. Had to remember the point of buying SCHD in the first place.
Good call. SCHD is a great one, I have it in all my portfolios as a long-term focused "steady as she goes" investment. Nice regular distribution that I feel comfortable just putting on reinvest; between auto-reinvesting the distribution and my additional contributions I feel like I can comfortably not worry about it and in 20 to 25 years it'll be a nice part of my portfolio's value and income generation.
How’s the SCHD doing now huh? Rolling in the dough?
I'm personally quite happy with it, solid part of the income portfolio.
@@lordofentropy I was wondering. With the growth and split that has been going on. Sad I only got in a few months ago
To me dividends are an emotional hedge (easier not to panic sell when still receiving dividends) ..
The same works for me
It makes me feel like dividend investors don't understand diversification. The choice isn't dividends stocks vs general stocks by themselves. You don't need to pull money during stock markets drops if you have some combination of cash reserves, laddered CDs, money market funds, bonds, annuities, REITs, real estate, and/or alternative investments. If you don't want to sell stocks during a recession then it's not complicated to make a plan for that
@@rayzerotI don’t like the idea of having to sell an asset just to touch the cash. I prefer to keep the asset while receiving the cash flow.. even Kevin O’Leary from shark tank said “if an investment doesn’t pay you anything, it’s not an investment” something along those lines but I agree.. plus dividends allow you to get more loans from the banks, they count as “income” where as Capital Gains does not count as income and you can not receive loans from banks to purchase investment realestate or anything…
But don't you get less dividend when the stock price goes down?
@@cavejohnson4054 Dividends are unaffected by price changes. Dividends are part of company's profits (not price on market) and are paid according to the shares you own.
Dude, spot on advice. Great job! And yeah, I think we investors overestimate how hard it is to stay in the market when things aren't looking too good. Whenever I'm tempted to either cut losses or capture profits, I remind myself of Fidelity's study of their best performing portfolios; the best performers were either dead or forgot they had an account.
It's amazing how that works lol
How does the saying go? A stock account is like soap: the more you touch it, the smaller it gets.
@@Qichar that is great. I'm stealing it.
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, find a CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
😂😂 do you a link to this study?
When the stock market goes down, as it has recently, I am comforted by the fact that the dividends I am re-investing are buying more shares at lower prices.
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, find a CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
This is the part that MOST people refuse to acknowledge... As long as my Div stocks dont go belly up, im actually somewhat happy to seem them fall in value for a time. Now that may not be the case when im 60+ and retired, but it is at 38 and rolling dividends...
Most of us probably buy more stock when it’s “on sale” and as it recovers the appreciation balloons on top of getting more dividends. Currently my dividend stock yield aggregate plus the appreciation is similar to my growth accounts.
You should focus on total returns and not dividends
The whole point in investing long term is to buy a money printing machine, established companies with reliable dividends are precisely this.
If you want a money printing machine, growth stocks print more money. And a small amount of planning and diversification will keep you from needing to sell stocks during a recession. Cash, REITS, direct real estate, institutional bonds, money market funds, annuities, alternative investments... take your pick to cover those multi-year dips and then reap a well earned reward when the market recovers
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
Tell me you don't know how dividends work without telling me!
@@_R8x_ 🙄
They certainly can be. One of the big issues with buying growth stocks is that growth is finite. At some point whatever market will be saturated and any further growth would violate local antitrust regulations. For most people though, just a set of index funds covering stocks and bonds both foreign and domestic is good enough. Doing much better does require a fair amount of work and a bit of luck.
You make an excellent case! 👍🏼. I’ll add 1 more point… Seeing my monthly dividend income grow is EXTREMELY motivating to continue investing . Buying growth makes sense intellectually, but during a bear market, watching my growth portfolio shrink…the motivation isn’t as high as it is for dividend investing. A lot of this is psychological! 😁
Totally agree on that - definitely psychological when you're talking about decades of investing
I don’t necessarily disagree with your view, dividends come with taxes (in a taxable account). I prefer them there because I want ultimate income flexibility, but I realize that’s not for everyone.
The main thing for me is picking great companies, whether they pay a dividend or not is a secondary consideration. If you’re absolutely against dividends and can find more than enough great companies that don’t pay them - then that absolutely works for you.
@justthebrttrk I agree with most of what you said, except for single stock picking. If you picked big cap companies that are leaders in their field...they are better than any etf or mutual funds performance wise...but you just have to keep up with the news and sell it once things look bad for their company or they lose this leadership. Mutual fund and etf, I admit, you can just leave it there and not think about it
I base a lot of my leverage/loan decisions on where my dividend income is. I aim for 1x or 2x my dividend maximum on my monthly loan obligations, that way, I can take cash from my taxable brokerage dividend account instead of DRIP if I need to draw on it if I lose my job or get seriously injured, etc. HUGE psychological buffer to know you have 1k/mo you can draw on from the back pocket, or whatever your number is. If you lose your job amidst a market crash have fun being forced to sell at deep losses to cover your mortgage payment or whatever leverage you took on. Nightmare scenario, and it's playing out for many.
I totally agree I hate paying taxes….I asked my employer to cut my salary by 50%. I’m now saving so much in tax! Wahoo!
I am a dividend guy......I have been reinvesting all my dividends to the same company, which buys me more shares. When I retire, (soon), I will be using my dividends in my pocket. Is it perfect? No. Nothing is perfect. It is simply a way I like to investing in part of my stocks......the rest are growth stocks.
You're absolutely right - it's never perfect. It's only about what works best for us individually
Doing it like that is actually quite dumb. Because the dividends are taxed at whatever your tax rate is. So you lose a portion every time you plow your dividends back into the same company. Why not forego the dividend and just let the company use that cash to repurchase its own shares for you instead?
@@johnmonk3381 I think the issue here is that the company doesn’t give you a choice. To me the most important part is to find the right companies. Whether or not they pay a dividend or do buybacks or both is not up to me. But ultimately picking the right companies overall is what leads to success
@@mattderron You are right in some way but I generally prefer to stay away from companies that pay huge chunk of their profits as dividends. Most of these are utilities, REITs, pipelines, shipping companies, in general, they are also high capex businesses, another turn off for me. I want a business that has little capex, operates with a high moat preferably a monopoly and generates a ton of cash without having to commit to huge capital reinvestments. Something like google or visa and mastercard. These are generally businesses in software and finance, with much lower capex which is why these are way smarter investments than companies that just do large dividend yields. Just my 2 cents of course, I just don't like to be paid too much in cash, because then I have pay the taxes and then figure out where to put that money now and ANY investment is better than just cash OR it is not, period. That's the point of investing. You just don't want too much cash returned to you so you can let it compound over time. So I just buy a good company that fits the bill and do nothing for the next 10, 20 years and it will do wonders minus the hassle
@@johnmonk3381 buying a portion of my portfolio is not based on the dividend completely, but often a truly good company (for example Coke) which also happens to have a good dividend. I re-invest the dividend into the stock, which gets me more shares. When I am retired, I will start using the dividends as part (not all) of my income.
I love how the conversation is if they pay out dividends they have no plans to grow the company but stock buy backs aren't in the same conversation. They are inflating the price because they have no plans to grow the company.
You’re right it is very similar, the only argument you could make is that stock buybacks can be stopped and started as company conditions change without too much issue. Dividends once you start you kind of have to keep them up since the market treats a dividend cut as bad
There is no taxes for stock buy backs while dividends are heavenly taxed. It should be clear what model should be prefered.
@@johanneswerner7649qualified dividends are NOT heavily taxed. It’s usually the same as your capital gains rate, and instead of holding for a year to get it you just need to hold for a 60 day period surrounding the dividend
@@johanneswerner7649Non qualified dividends are taxed as ordinary income but after the first year eligible dividends become qualified dividends and are taxed at a long term rate of 0% for the first $44k. I supposed you could make the argument that you could simply sell investments up to $44k at 0% every year but if you hit a recession and the market is down you either have a cashflow issue or sell at a loss potentially greater than a single year of dividends at ordinary income rates.
@@johanneswerner7649 normal income tax? Short term gain?
I just bought $2k of O on Monday at $52/share. Right now it's at $49/share. So if I waited until today I'd have gotten a little over 1 more share. The dividend for that 1 share I missed out on is pennys, I'm not going to worry about it. Like Warren Buffet says "you don't lose money on a stock until you sell it ".
It's impossible to know exactly what a stock will do price wise on any given day. If you believe in the company long term then just keep checking that their story is what you expect, and you should be fine.
If it makes you feel better i dumped 10k in when it was 58 a share...still have 0 regrets
I actually have lost money in company I did not sell! Their are a couple of different ways this can happen.
O stock is down YTD, 1 year and 5 year but a lot of people buy it because it's good for monthly income and it pushed a lot with dividend investors. ABR is up YTD, 1 year and 5 year and they have a much better dividend CAGR, but Dividend Kings like O deserve a premium price.
Trust me I know, I do own both! I am all about monthly stocks. I actually own 12 monthly dividend stocks and all but one ETFs (SCHD) are monthly.
Dividends are very popular in Australia which is helped by a unique system called "franking credits" which come with dividends and stop double taxation on company profits. Basically any tax already paid on the company profits paid to you as a shareholder are recognised as tax already paid when the shareholder does there own tax return.
Of course most experienced investors know that some dividend shares go down slightly after every dividend is paid then it goes up before then next dividend payout
Exactly. Making it sound like the small price drop ex-dividend is permanent is some strange logic. If things worked like that, dividend share prices would eventually fall to 0.
I’m not a dividend investor, but this was a really well-balanced video
I was thinking the same
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
What strange behavior - you've posted this comment 5+ times already. I don't claim to be a licensed advisor. Just a guy that likes stocks and learned about investing over years. I share my portfolio for full transparency on my channel for people who want to follow along. I preach that people start with index funds, do their own research, and never blindly follow anybody else's investments.
You should just breathe man, sometimes just ignoring and moving on with your life is the move lol
@@mattderronoh my
I have only just recently come across this channel. I've got to say the quality of content and how well you explain things is brilliant 👍
Thank you very much, I appreciate it!
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
I own both dividend paying stocks and ones that do not. I find the latter just as risky in terms of share price. At least with a dividend paying stock, when the price goes down, you at least have dividends until the price recovers. Dividends can also be forecasted to some degree (no guarantees). Share prices cannot. I have also noticed that stocks that pay dividends tend to be more stable (share price).
What about stocks that cut or stop paying dividends altogether?
@@majorgear1021 I avoid those like poison. The majors rarely have that problem. That is why I avoid investing in the small guys. BUT I do sometimes get hit. Got one now. Alumina. So I understand your point.
Really appreciated you walking through the Meta ups and downs over 5 years. Great lesson. I’ve walked through that with stocks and said I’m holding long term and then 2-3 years on am looking at a negative return and wondering what I’m doing wrong. I’m not an all-dividends guy, but have a healthy allocation to dividend payers and I certainly see the psychological effect of being able to assure myself that at least I’m getting paid while I wait for the stock price to rebound.
But you’re not “getting paid” in any meaningful sense. You are no better off than being in an equivalent non-div player.
@@sybo59 I said I see the psychological effect. Real effect… insubstantial. Psychological: I understand why people gravitate to dividends because it feels good, much like many things we do that aren’t really valid but make us feel better.
Dividends are dope. Personally, I sometimes use my dividends to buy other dividend and growth stocks for diversification instead of reinvesting in the same stock. To each their own methods though. The good thing is that you’re investing in the first place and that’s what’s important. Salute for the content!
Exactly, never auto-reinvest.
The other benefit to dividend stocks is that you will continue to receive dividends over time while your money stays in the stock so you are earning that income over time while the stock price itself will change over time just like a normal stock.
So you still have the option of selling your shares if the stock price goes up, but while you are waiting for that you are also earning additional income through the dividends, whereas with a growth stock you don't make anything until you decide to sell or you borrow money against your stock.
Unless you are doing trading vs investing I would prefer the dividends so that I can continue to make money that I can then re-invest or save at my discretion without having to sell my shares than waiting around and hoping the stock price stays high for when I eventually decide to sell.
This one is exactly the type of arguments that only somebody that doesn’t understand the math would do…
You can do the exact same thing, selling part of the shares of the company, every $1 of dividend you receive is $1 the company value would have increased… so if you sell $1 of share, you are in the exact same situation the dividend investor is in…..
That’s not an advantage at all…
@@raffaelepiccini3405 This sounds like an argument that someone who doesn't understand what dividend stocks are would make.
With a dividend paying stock it doesn't matter whether or not the price increases, goes sideways or loses value.
With a dividend company you are paid no matter what the stock is doing, it doesn't have to gain value for you to get your share.
What you are earning is a portion of the company profits either each month or each quarter depending on how your dividend stock is set up.
If you just straight up buy normal stock price HAS to increase in value otherwise you make nothing.
But with dividend stocks you can continue to make profit even if price stays the same WITHOUT selling any of your stock.
The best overall setup is investing in a company who not only will have an increase in value in their stock price over time, but will also pay you dividends while you wait.
You are getting paid to hold the stock, so why would you go for growth only stocks vs dividend stocks?
The "math" is clearly in favor of dividends in the long term.
@@magickmynd1296when dividends are paid the cost of the dividends counts against the stock price. So if the price stays the same on the dividend stock that means the price should have gone up by the amount of the dividend that was paid.
Another way of looking at dividends is that the management is forcing you to sell X% every year whether you like it or not and you have to reinvest if you want to keep your position.
@DobesVandermeer that’s not true at all. Your ownership stake stays the same whether you reinvest or not. If you reinvest you get more ownership than you did before
I like to do both. I have a QQQM for my growth and the rest of my portfolio is schd and a couple of single dividend stocks!
Great picks!
Good points! I think dividend investors are focused on building an army of shares that increase their dividends over time. So they aren't as concerned with share price as they are with the share outputs -- more like a real business owner, as you put it. Having said that, good growth stocks can increase in value far more quickly than, say, SCHD. I like to emphasize dividends but include a smaller amount of growth stocks as potential boosters.
I'm a dividend investor here in Australia and over the last 5 years my share growth has been between 70 to 80% depending on the stock plus I got Dividends.
@@user-kh9px6bg7b The past few years were pretty anomalous, it's a nice bump but we shouldn't treat it as normal.
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
I’m so happy that this video exists. Finally someone who gets it !!!!
- selling shares is not the same as a dividend
- the drop in share price is relative to the movement of that day and the movement of the market in general, it’s not guaranteed loss of the share price. It can recover, it might not. Not it’s not guaranteed lost value.
- you maintain equity and get cash to do with as you wish :)
A dividend is exactly the same as selling shares after a stock buyback. At the end, the company is less valuable and your stake in the company is the same, whereas if you had held through the buyback / reinvested the dividend, you would've increased your stake.
Great video! I’m a fan of both. No absolutes. Enjoy the benefits and experience the drawbacks of both.
100%, I don't do absolutes either
Only a Sith deals in absolutes
@@dangreen126 lol That actually popped into my mind when I wrote it.
If your dividends are automatically reinvested into buying stocks, there's no reason a company should fear issuing dividends (it's basically reinvesting in your business, to an extent). There are enough people buying stocks to subsidize the people who are not buying more stocks. The other fact of the matter is that if your company is worth buying its stocks, then they are likely making a sizeable profit and incentivizing people to buy their stocks whether a dividend is issued or not. Costco and Moody's have risen more than 20% thus far this year. That's fantastic, dividend stock or otherwise. Automatic reinvesting also means that investors don't really need to think about their investments except to make sure they are still seeing a return from time to time. If you are worried about losing money because you weren't "paying attention" to your stocks, then you aren't very confident in the long-term viability of your companies.
As you become older you rely on income streams…finding the highest quality consistent income stream that’s taxed the least…capital appreciation isn’t as important
Excellent discussion. Long term growth investor here. I deal with the emotional risks of market swings by NOT looking. I check my portfolio twice a year max. My time horizon is always 30+ years. I've averaged 13.6% annual return for 30+ years. Sure, the worst year dropped 40%. But I don't look and the loss is only a paper loss. You've convinced me that a value/dividend fund would add something to my portfolio. Thanks!
That is an excellent way to deal with the emotional ups and downs for sure
I appreciate your calm and detached analysis, and the fact that you never “bash” any type of strategy. I’m nearing retirement, and my portfolio has three legs. Some pure growth, some dividend growth and some income in the form of BDCs. My total return might not outperform the S&P, but I sleep well 😁
Sleeping well at the end of the day is really the only important requirement and I think that is what a lot of us forget
I really really really really really hope that you have some of your retirement money outside of companies and the stock market. We may be heading for a huge decline. This is not financial advice because you need to make your own decisions. But go listen to a recent interview with Jeremy Grantham and then make whatever decisions seem the best for you.
@@geoffgjof Lol, Jeremy Grantham, who has predicted 25 out of the last 2 market crashes? I'm not saying it couldn't happen but that guy has perma-bear written all over him. I also don't necessarily listen to the perma-bulls either but listening to big daddy Buffett who says we should be in the market through thick and thin, sounds like homeboy has his bases covered with some dividend growth paying him regularly as well as BDCs for a little bigger income. If it all tanks then we're all screwed anyway, so cheers!
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
Sorry I am new to investing, but what is BDC?
Thanks for sharing your perspective on dividend investing :)
About the arguments: I think the most important one is the motivation and happiness that comes with it for a lot of investors, which is one of the most important parts of life anyways.
So if it makes anyone happy investing in a dividend portfolio, i would say go for it, happiness is worth a lot in my books.
On the other hand, i still don't see the point of being able to receive a steady plannable income, even in downturns, since that is still the same for non-dividend paying stocks as well (after all the dividend comes out of the share price, so you could just sell the equivalent amount in shares).
Another point i want to make is that i personally would not like to be invested into companies that i don't trust to handle the money better than myself.
If i think i can outperform the company i am invested in by collecting dividends from them and investing them elsewhere, then maybe i should not be invested in that company after all.
Those are just my thought, i personally mostly follow an empirical approach of a factor tilted broadly diversified portfolio.
Thanks for responding, glad you watched this one. I totally understand your thought process on “only investing in companies I trust to allocate profits” - makes perfect sense.
The emotional aspect is a big part because it’s not just about making people happy but a key part in being successful at this. It’s easy to get caught up in the swings and dividend payments help greatly with that.
The argument about “equivalent amount of shares can be sold” assumes all opportunities are equal, part of what I hoped to show is that the idea works in theory but you still have to apply it to specific companies to make it work. And companies are always unique and “unequal” to each other. Anyway, I appreciate your perspective, thanks!
The thing to realise is that a lot of divident stocks are not so just because they are set up poorly, but rather because they have such a large market share already that there is serious diminishing returns on investing more in their own sector. Sure they can invest in other markets experimentally, but they likely do not have as much of an advantage there compared to other companies built around those areas, so the expected growth would also be mediocre. In such a case it makes a lot of sense to simply just say "we are going to return a fraction of the profits as divident", as you are effectively harvesting the majority of the value in a sector already. For instance I would be much more interested in buying compariably priced shares of Amazons cloud solution rather than the entire amazon package, and just get dividents from that part of their buisness, the rest of the buisness does increase the value of their stock because it does give additional profit, but the profit per investment required in their cloud part is vastly higher, and as such I expect that I could get a higher return per investment on just their cloud buisness, at least if I can buy it before the stock prices adjust accordingly.
@@sorcdk2880But if management thought the business would do well, they would do stock buybacks rather than dividends.
I'm so happy i discovered dividend investing. I have two babies and i feel great knowing i will help them even after I'm gone. They won't have to sell shares, they'll just collect dividends and hopefully they'll never have to sell, and pass it down to their kids
That's awesome, I love this!
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, find a CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
I had the same thing in mind when I started my small stock portfolio.
Dividend stocks can be like growth stocks if you use DRIP. You simply reinvest the divs into the same stock. Instead of relying on a growth stock price per share to increase, you are increasing the amount of shares you have. Both result in the same "growth", but Dividends come with the option of you having control over it. Another benefit is qualified dividends can be had at lower or no tax (depending on income) to money made from selling shares (especially if you didn't hold them for at least a year). So depending on your income you can be getting dividends tax free, then you can reinvest those dividends in the same stock and that counts as paid purchase come capitol gain/lose time when you do sell. A growth stock that you bought $50 worth of and you sold them for $100 means a $50 gain come tax time. A div stock you bought $50 worth of and you used DRIP to increase your shares so that it totaled $100 when you sold those shares would not be a $50 gain, but would take into account the total purchases (initial $50 plus all DRIP purchases). This meaning the Gain you pay will be much less come tax time.
Great explanation and balanced view of the 2 investing styles. Of the 3 vangard funds, VIGAX had the highest Sharpe ratio. So while returns were more erratic, the returns were better even after factoring in volatility. But the higher sharpe ratio, while being greater, wasn't enormously better, and that also changes over time periods.
THANK YOU for the informative video. On the part where you talk about the CAGR are you counting the reinvestment of dividends? That is the part that confuses me when looking at overall growth stocks versus dividend-investing stocks. Should we count the reinvestment of dividends into that calculation?
it includes dividend reinvestment. In terms of "should we" it really depends on your situation. If you're using the income to live then probably not. If you're reinvesting for long-term growth - then probably yes?
Very eloquently put! A lot of examples reminded me of my own journey riding the growth stocks wave and watching them plummet (esp. tech). To balance the sanity and still not loose out on gains, I do 80/20 div & growth. Overall outcome is above average performance than index and also sleep at night factor
That’s awesome! I’ve had a lot of similar experiences myself and it has definitely shaped my view about the value of both
Thank you for a very good clear explanation. At 61 years old I've been investing for circa 20 years and I have always had a mixed portfolio of growth and dividend stocks and reinvested dividends for further growth, except when I have needed cashflow when I simply stopped the reinvestment and took the cash. Knowing what your dividend stream is going to be is a huge lifestyle enabler for me. As I get older I am moving to a more dividend based portfolio replacing the growth stocks with dividend stocks as market opportunities arise to guarantee that income and avoid worries of fluctuations on the stock price that would ensue if I had to sell the growth stocks for income..
Great video Matt.... I think it's all about your personal goals, which ours is trying to maximize passive income without selling the principal (stocks or funds) so we'll have a larger inheritance to pass on.
As a dividend investor, I agree 100%. I would like emphasize the importance of not using dividends as income when youre just starting to build a portfolio, but reinvesting them to buy more dividends.
While there might be some purely emotional/psychological reasons to favor dividends, there's no practical reason to. Planning withdrawals around dividends is a sub-optimal variable withdrawal strategy. If the stock price is down and you take dividends as cash, it has the same practical effect on your balance as selling the equivalent amount in shares. A better variable withdrawal strategy is to make withdrawals after shares have done well recently regardless of whether that means taking dividends as cash or selling shares.
For some dividend investors, it doesn't matter what the stock price does as long as the company earnings are enough to be able to keep paying the dividend to cover your living expenses. You're greater concern is how many shares can I accumulate, not what can I sell them for. Share prices will fluctuate based on what's happening in the economy and what the news tells us (even if earnings are solid, the market often over reacts to what they see on TV). When you're buying dividend stocks of companies that you know are going to be around for the long haul, you stop worrying about the share price sit back and collect your dividends. Maybe sell some out-of-the-money covered calls on positions to increase income.
@@BrianNC81 That makes absolutely no practical sense. Total balance and total return is all that matters. Whether you have 100 shares valued at $50 per share or 50 shares valued at $100 per share, the total value is $500.
There's no reason to assume dividend companies are more likely to be around for the 'long haul'. If company issues a dividend after its share price drops the share price will drop even further, proportionate to the dividend.
Any perceived inherent advantage of dividend stocks is illusory.
@@alankoslowski9473 You cant assume that any company is there for the "long haul". Also selling share requires you to have a "lot of shares" to sell off in the end. I have an ETF that distributes and one that doesn't and both are for later. Also I have single stocks on the side, some stocks I dont pay any taxes on the dividens thanks to the company tax optimisation, but I will pay these taxes indirectly when selling the stocks. In the end the persons choice to make in what they want to invest. I also hope everyone will have constant positive returns of their investment. :)
Awesome contrarian view. I have most of my dividend assets in non-taxable account, but I don’t cash out, I reinvest in various assets.
Tax is a "cost of flexibility" is total nonsense., because in non-divident stock you can always sell your share.
It’s a pretty simple concept actually - the dividend paying stock forces you to pay tax. While the non-dividend paying company doesn’t. That forced tax comes with the benefit of being able to allocate your share of the profits however you want without selling part of your ownership stake.
Can you sell shares? Of course. That’s a choice you make. Dividends and tax on dividends happen without your input.
@@mattderron I think you missed his point.
@@Kralnor I didn’t though because I addressed it in the video and in countless responses to comments on the video as well. His point is that selling shares in the same dollar amount as the potential dividend is equivalent. It is not.
Here in Australia many companies issue dividends with something called franking credits. These credits are for the tax that the company has paid on their profits, which reduces or eliminates the tax that the shareholder has to pay on the income.
That's awesome, hadn't heard of that
@@mattderron It is awesome, and even better - you can get a refund for the tax paid by the company as part of your tax return.
Sometimes people find it difficult to sell shares of stocks even after it garners healthy returns, either because of greed of further upside or becoming emotionally attached to the script. Dividend becomes a systematic withdrawal plan in these scenarios and protects capital.
wrong. dividends is just a way to thank your investors for the money invested, but penalize them hardly. it is better to keep the money and invest it or buy-back stocks.
Depends on your situation. If you need a regular income to live, then regular dividends are good. When the stock market blows out 20 or 30% in a month and 60% in a couple of years you're happy to get your dividends year after year. The cash you get from the dividends is real, the value of the share is just indicative until the day you sell. The stock market went down 20% in coupke of months ant it may get worse. Still got my dividends. Value is good when you need to grow your capital. Then dividend is good when you actually need the money. Especially if you're in country where the value of shares has not beengrowing for years if not decades.
Great balanced approach! Love the fact you’re selling what I would consider as a quality balanced nuanced mindset, rather than panic or drama. I’ll be coming back to watch more videos!
Balanced approach my ass. Just the first section alone, doesn't even disputes that dividends lower the stock, but rather argues they are better than stock buybacks. There are many ways the underlaying company can reinvest the cash, and most of the times it won't be stock buybacks, so centering it around that is just a garbage counterpoint. He commits a lot of these fallacies throughout and never actually shows how dividend portfolios overperform a market portfolio.
Thanks I appreciate it!
You clearly watched the video attached to some bias. The video doesn’t claim “dividends are better” at all. Quite the opposite actually. But you’d have to actually watch the video without assuming you already know what it’s going to say I guess
Excellent points!! I agree with you 100%. Thank you very much for putting together this useful information and share with us.
As a former stockbroker IN PRACTICE I rarely saw a stock price decrease after paying a dividend, and if the price did get reset after a dividend payout, it was a matter of seconds it would snap back to the pre-payout price, unless the whole market was having a down day.
Yeah even if the bid/ask starts there at the beginning of the trading day, it immediately changes due to normal market factors. That's why I never really understood people's focus on that criticism
@@mattderron It's a silly critique. The price dropping makes people want to buy more, raising the price back to the old level almost instantly. Plenty of dividend stocks hold firm their price while paying out 8% or more dividends/year, and have been doing so for years.
Exactly and I think one aspect that frequently gets overlooked is that the dividend was actual cash in hand to the investor. So they are getting the advantage of actual cash plus normal market movements which tend to go higher over time (generalization)
I question the veracity of this comment. I hold broadly diversified index ETFs. When they pay a dividend the share price always drops proportionately to the dividend. It doesn't instantly recover. It doesn't necessarily recover the next day or week or month. It just fluctuates concurrently with the market as expected.
@@alankoslowski9473 "veracity." that is a big word
My current style of stocks screening is, plain fundamental analysis. Then after sorted out, my focus are on equity annual growth, RoE stability and sustainable growth rate SGR = RoE x (1-DPR).
As long as both of these factors have satisfying value, whether that is dividend paying, growth, or even value stocks, honestly i don't really care.
I agree with you. I have always liked dividends or companies buying back stock. When I see how much cash on hand some of these companies hold, it blows my mind. All it does it makes management push for higher growth rates. Sometimes that isn't practical. Assuming that all industries will grow at high rates all the time isn't realistic. When you get that cash out it will relive management from excessive stress to grow. Especially good idea if the economy is slowing down.
I agree there is likely a shift in mindset when it comes to a company becoming a consistent dividend payer. Some just handle it better than others obviously
Something about having something directly from your investment also has appeal. If a company has difficulty going forward for some reason, you can have some assurance that at least I had received something. Ideally, I think half of earnings should be distributed. Of course, many factors need to be considered.
Good video my friend. The problem with any stock investing is the inevitable crash that occurs and that’s usually worse for growth stocks. So dividend stocks always give you the chance to reinvest the dividends at lower stock prices.
But for me the big psychological issue is being 100% in stocks. Ben Graham recommended a 50/50 stock/bond portfolio but I think bonds are unreliable so I use cash instead. And then rebalance every 3-6 months. So if there is a crash you have half your investment in cash ready to buy cheap stocks.
I don’t know if this improves returns but it’s easier to sleep at night and to keep investing. Imagine investing for 30 years and then watching a 500,000 dollar or U.K. Pounds investment drop to 250,000 or lower. If half of your investment was in cash you would only drop to 375,000 and 250,000 of that would be in cash, giving you the opportunity to buy cheap stocks. Rebalancing means you would buy stocks for 62,500 with totals of 187,500 in stocks and the cash balance reduced to 187,500.
Sometimes , stocks don’t recover for a decade so I prefer this approach. I also split my stock investment 50/50 between growth and dividend ETFs .
Dividends mean you're investing in a profitable company.
Until they aren't and cancel dividends but yh that won't happen if you're investing smart
$MCD ftw btw
Here in Canada we have a tfsa account which stands for a tax-free savings so if you were 18 years old in 2009 your total contribution limit to your tfsa would be $102,000. 102,000 worth of companies that were dividend paying any dividends earned in that tfsa count are tax-free on your Canadian income tax. Now if you have dividend companies from the United States in your tfsa the US automatically takes a 15% withholdings tax. I've been doing the math though it's still pretty worth it depending on the dividend you're getting for example there's some high yield ETFs out there.
It’s baffling how nay sayers keep repeating like broken record that dividends don’t work and aren’t real 😂 there’s literally 100s of examples on RUclips proving them wrong
Who says that for example?
The trick is to determine the difference between investments and speculations. Most people buying stocks think they are investing, but are actually speculating. Huge difference.
Nice video.
Thanks!
Subscribed. Loved your calm and logical vibe.
It would be good to adjust for inflation (and not just cpi).
Nominal dividend returns before tax look great.
Real dividend returns post tax and inflation, can look terrible if your goal is good, car, housing etc
Thanks I appreciate it! In terms of how I account for inflation, in general it's in my portfolio strategy. I'm looking for companies who provide dividend growth greater than the rate of inflation, so basically I'm targeting the dividends that hopefully outpace it over time.
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
Nice video!
I think the biggest issue people who don't engage in dividend growth investing have with it is that it takes a lloonngg time to start seeing some real growth. I'm a big fan of dividend growth investing and have been doing it for less than 10r years, and although my portfolio is growing at an exponential rate, that rate isn't yet high enough to turn heads. Focusing on the art of finding stock that pay the best yield on cost, I KNOW eventually it'll be bananas, it just isn't yet.
There are a lot of pro's to dividend growth investing, but the main point I use when anyone asks me why I use that approach is: I'm getting paid to literally just hold the shares.
Thanks!
Some companies don't need new ideas. Pepsi comes to mind.
I understand your point, and can definitely be true depending on what someone's goals are as an investor - but Pepsi also spends $800M / year on R&D so even they think they need to be researching new ideas 🤷🏻♂️
most of what passes for "new ideas" these days is just buying someone else out. it's just the "conglomerate" grift from the 70s coming 'round again now that everybody who experienced it the first time has died.
for me the issue is cutting dividends (INTC, MPW..), or stopping them altogether (DIS, CCL, BA..)
Difference is companies like Intel have started their turn around as expected. T would be a better example as they have only gone down since the cut and split
Exactly. Is a company “paying” a high dividend yield because it is in trouble, with the stock price falling significantly whilst they have not yet announced that the dividend has been cut? Need to do your research…
Another alternative to buyback is to payback debt which rewards all shareholders equally. The improve balance sheet will attract investors driving up the stock prices.
That's a good idea if the interest rate is higher than the return they would get from a buyback.
Another potential benefit of dividend investing, specifically when you're re-investing that capital, is the fact that you're raising your cost basis over time (assuming your portfolio's going up over time). If you ever do need to sell equity, you capital gains will be smaller, and thus your tax for that year will be smaller, as you've essentially paid a portion of it ahead of time. This can be a huge help if you do have to liquidate a large amount at once due to unforeseen circumstances.
I really liked the way you laid that out. I lean on the growth stock side, but you made some interesting points about dividend investing. Thanks!
Thanks I appreciate it!
2:45 Why would you be invested in a company, if you do not want to reinvest the dividends in that company?
4:30 Why would dividend show stability of business model? Many companies gives out dividends that they borrow money for, while the company is not profitable, Dividends are not part of profits, it is just any money the comapny decides.
Because I prefer to take my dividends in cash so I can reinvest in the companies at the best valuation IMO at the time. It's not that I don't like the company, but it may not be at an attraction valuation compared to others in my portfolio at that time. Nothing wrong with DRIP though if people prefer that.
Dividends show stability since the business has to be able to continue to earn enough to pay out. Yes they can use debt and many companies do as a capital allocation strategy (not all) but ultimately that debt shows up in their fundamentals as well. But I think saying they are "unprofitable" is wrong.
Obviously every company needs to be judged on their own merits (a major point in the video) but if a company is a consistent dividend payer they've reached a maturity in their business - I don't think that is controversial to say at all.
@@mattderron you just made my point. Why keep being invested in company A paying dividends, if there is company B and C you want to invest your dividend to?
"Dividends show stability since the business has to be able to continue to earn enough to pay out".
That is just wrong, for example you can have a company that just issues new shares and then pays dividend from that without any business at all.
There are penny stocks that basically do just that, except they pretend that they have unprofitable business.
No I didn't make your point - just because I feel like other companies in my portfolio are at more attractive valuations right now doesn't mean I don't like the first company long-term still. This is just allocating new capital to the most attractive option at the time, not changing all of your invested capital every quarter...very simple concept.
Sure, you can pick out examples of companies that pay dividends that are terrible and not worthy of investment. I've said multiple times in the video and in this comment thread that each company needs to be evaluated on its own merits. However - if you don't believe that in general dividend companies are more stable than non-dividend payers, then I don't know what else to tell you. To each their own. Good luck to you.
@@mattderron If you say, that you recieve dividends from a portfolio and your dividend company is not worth investing, then it is not worth investing and you should sell it.
It is true that there is correlation between profitable company with dividend and stability. That is because most managment of companies are not idiots and when their company goes bancrupt and stops being stable, they stop issuing dividend and when everything is great they start issuing dividend.
Saying that dividend companies are stable is a Hindsight bias.
Also unprofitable companies with dividends are not more stable then unprofitable companies without dividends.
I'll try this one more time and hopefully it helps, but if you truly just don't want to see it, then there's nothing I can do and we're just wasting our time.
When you put new money into your brokerage account - do you buy every stock or ETF you have evenly every time? Or do you buy whatever you think is the best value at the moment?
If you're not willing to buy every single thing in an even amount then it must mean you don't feel like it's worth investing in anymore and you should sell?
Do you see how ridiculous this point of view is?
Love this video and how much awareness you spread with it, kudos!
The thing about the price dropping after the dividend is declared is offset, in whole or in part, by the price bump that a stock will see in the days leading up to the ex-dividend date when a dividend, or other distribution, is announced. There are investors who don't buy and hold dividend stocks. They will pile in during the last few days before the stock goes ex-dividend, then sell when they become the shareholder of record for the dividend, then pile into the next dividend stock on their dividend calendar. They float from stock to stock, like a bee in a field of flowers, qualifying for the dividend, then moving on. You are collecting multiple dividends with the same money. You can easily double your money over the course of a year. Not many growth stocks can match that rate of return.
I prefer divs. If I can average 5-9% Div payments (especially monthly paying) for the rest of my life, then my kids lives and theirs after that, that’s the definition of a family legacy. Building family wealth. Every dollar that comes back that you don’t have to put time into earning is so valuable. If your portfolio never has to be liquidated to be able to use that money then how can you lose? BUT at the end of the day there as so many ways to build wealth. To each his own
Agree 💯
You are 100% right! If your timeline is long, you can buy some dividends but growth matters. But that doesn't mean you can't start tracking the income your portfolio generates! 💪🏻
The other thing to keep in mind is that just because the company doesn't pay a dividend doesn't necessarily mean it's reinvesting more in itself than a company that does pay a dividend. The company that pays the dividend might be more profitable overall, perhaps even having more money to reinvest in itself even after paying the dividend. Moreover, just because a company is reinvesting the cash doesn't mean they are doing so wisely. Even if you think the company has a strong core business, perhaps the reinvest is going towards some misguided pet project of the CEO or something like that.
if that belief makes you sleep better at night..
I mean, I could buy stocks for dividends and only pay 25% tax on them, or I can buy stocks for growth, which I need to sell for 4,90+0,25% and pay 25% tax on what I gained. Meaning I am always at a disadvantage when needing to sell. Selling also means you will hamper your growth potential by x shares, while dividends just pay out what is supposedly superfluous anyways.
Those are a lot of things growth would need to compensate to create any form of consistent income.
You can always take a loan when you need to front a project and use dividends to pay your monthly payments which nobody talks about. I dont want to always "sell stocks" and wait to invest in down years.
Interesting. Loan based off your portfolio or what?
@@ryebread447 any loans interest free cc, any loan under 6% is considered good credit. I put my yearly expenses on an interest free cc every year about 10-15k, invest the money and pay off the card with dividends. This allows me to put the money into the market faster. Basically covers one month of that cc payment doing it this way.
Great info! I have a question: One of my 401k funds (target date) were converted from a fund that distributed dividends annually (and then reinvested into the fund, increasing my share count), to a fund that retains the dividends and lets the dividends earned contribute to the value of the fund. How can I analyze which is better? I don't like the idea of not getting additional shares via dividend disbursement and having faith that the fund's appreciation is going to offset that. Any thoughts on this? Thanks!
I'm not really sure - it would depend on the fund I guess - I'm not really understanding what you mean by "contributes to the value of the fund."
@@mattderron Yeah, neither do I. I think the argument was it's better to keep the dividends proceeds pooled in the fund rather than distribute them in a prorated way to the individual fund owners.
Set a portion of your ROTH as dividends allow them to reinvest until retirement and never pay a dime in taxes.
Thank you for making this video. It presents the ideas and facts I was often presenting to the "dividend haters" on an investing heads site. My father would never have wanted to have to decide from a portfolio of stocks which ones to sell and which ones to keep at any given point in time, or how many shares to sell, or exactly when to sell them. Dividends rolled in. It was automatic. He held onto his shares, year after year after year. He really was more like an owner than a trader. Emotionally, psychologically, and economically, holding dividend paying stocks (or mutual funds and ETFs) makes a lot of sense for some investors.
Thank you. I am primarily a dividend investor, based on original purchase prices I’m receiving a 7.8% dividend, I’m happy with that and I never need to sell the shares, could I make more on growth stocks, sure but I’d have to sell shares when I need income price high or low. Tax on dividends is low here based on income
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
You buy shares with a 1% dividend yield for 1,000 euros. That means a cash flow of 10 euros.
Both multiply tenfold and you have 10,000 euros in your portfolio. The personal dividend yield is now 10%, but it is still only 100 euros for a position of 10,000 euros.
Now one sells the position, after taxes remain approx. 7,500 euro cash and of it one buys shares, a company with 3% current dividend yield.
Then you have a cash flow of 225 Euro. That is 125% more than with 10% personal dividend yield.
So what is the use of a 10% personal dividend yield that you had before?
Just to be clear. Tax isn't the price of flexibility. Tax is the price of government. The same system would work without tax as it does in a tax free account. 2:45 You are conflating relation between two things that happen at the same time (Flexibility and Tax). You aren't paying for flexibility.
Obviously there are always nuances when it comes to taxes. Even in a taxable account if you have qualified dividends and are under the income thresholds, you won't pay any tax either.
But in a taxable account where you decide to invest in a company that distributes profits back to shareholders that gets recognized as income - many are paying taxes on those dividends. I was merely trying to show that getting your share of company profits in cash comes with the benefit of flexibility and the expense of tax.
We could argue all day on the actual usefulness of government and their allocation of our money - if you've seen some of my other videos you might already know how I feel about that.
I am happy you pointed out the virtues of both styles of investing. Most of the dividend investing videos I watch don't do that. They talk about dividend investing as if that's only style of investing people should do when the fact is most people would benefit from both. Dividend investing works really well when you're saving for retirement which most of us are. Growth works really well when you're saving for a specific goal like a down payment on a house. This is why I invest in both kinds of stocks. If I only invested in dividend stocks I would have to sell some of them when I go to buy a house, and I don't ever want to sell my dividend stocks. That defeats the purpose of investing in dividends.
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
Good info, not what I was expecting. A lot of other problems between the two vary with one's income level and taxes. With dividends, you're taxed annually but if taken a a lump sum by selling a growth stock it could make income over some IRS tax limit potentially limiting contributions to tax free accounts.. Qualified dividends pay less than high yield dividends but at a low income level they are not taxed. But at higher income levels they are taxed at a higher rate and that makes them then less valuable than high yield dividends. The truest metric is total return after taxes for one's specific income level in the current and near term future.
What I like about dividend payouts is that it forces me to take profits every so often. The company pays out a dividend and it appears on my balance. My personality is mostly a "just hold onto it, it'll return to green" for downturns coupled with "hold longer, it's probably going to go higher still". While I think the opposite is even worse, people who sell imediatly whenever the price turns down and take profits the moment growth exceeds 3 %, I tend to pass up opportunities because I'm reluctant to liquidate positions. And the last point about emotions is critical. None of this behavior is rational. There's no reason to be "loyal" to the stocks you buy. I can sell them at any time for relatively low cost, basically just the ask / bid difference. But I do avoid the 15 to 20 dollar loss, even though an opportunity that would possibly make me a few hundred dollars is available. A dividend stock pays me every so often and I can't be the usual "just hold longer" because on the Ex Dividend day, I get the money regardless wether I want it or not.
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
I'm a growth investor, but you made some very good data-based arguments. I'll be thinking about whether my portfolio needs any modifications. Thank you for challenging my thinking 😊👏🙏
Nice, glad it was helpful!
Great stuff Matt! Another statistic that supports the case is that dividend stocks match the performance of the S&P over long periods of time and dividend growers outperform the S&P by like 2% over long periods.
Thanks, I appreciate it!
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
Well, aside from that extra decade that snuck in there, that was really useful. Subscribed.
Thanks!
I personally prefer to receive money in my account without needing to sell anything. Instead of selling to receive money I buy more shares constantly to receive more dividends each year. We can do that forever and pass to future generations. Also market wont go up forever and in times of crisis you still get your dividends. Selling to receive money is my worst nightmare 😂
Feel the same.
An important point of contention. In several countries dividens are NOT taxes. But gains from selling stocks are
This is quality work. Glad to see this channel growing so fast.
Thanks, much appreciated!
Excellent summary and great points about volatility. The real challenge I think most investors face during their investment lifetime is limiting emotional decisions.
Agreed!
You should also mention the tax aspect of dividends. Not only do dividends gets taxed at the company level before it's distributed to you, unless you invest these in a tax sheltered account, you get taxed again on the individual income level. I think smart investors should just invest in individual companies and analyze them case by case and not put yourself into the growth investor or the dividend investor categories. For every Amazon and Google, there are hundreds of Pelotons, and for dividends, there are also plenty of dividend paying value trap companies to avoid.
Thanks, I don't disagree with you at all. I actually talk about most of those points in the video
The tax aspects are really misleading to many. You usually have millionaires talk about it more, because higher income brackets are more affected by it than anyone, and it just doesn't match up with the vast majority of people who will not actually pay what millionaires do in taxes.
Qualified dividends aren't even taxed for the first $44,625 you earn. In retirement, if you include that plus social security which also isn't taxed, you can actually live quite comfortably without paying any taxes on your income. Regardless though, how many people do you know investing in the markets right now that actually makes that much/yr just from dividends? So over most of your dividend investment career you're not going to be paying any taxes on that. It's only in retirement when your nest egg has grown to a point where you actually are making that much, where you will begin to pay taxes, and it's only 15% of anything earning in excess of $44,625, up to $492,301, where it will begin to change to 20%. Now do you know anyone making $492,301/yr in dividends? Probably not.
In your retirement age, after having spent 30+ years working paying nearly 30% of your income your whole life, are you going to be upset paying 15% of your dividend income you no longer need to work for? Mentally, you couldn't give a shit because that money is going right into your bank account and paying all your bills, work-free. In comparison, watching you lose 80k in a week because the president said they were going to do X and thus that causes the markets to crash, how do you think you'd feel mentally in retirement? And regardless, whenever you sell, you still have to pay taxes on your capital gains, so you're just waiting for later to pay taxes anyway on your growth stocks. It's not like it's not taxed when you actually want to harvest your gains to use said money to, you know, live.
Most people who do invest in dividends aren't going to give 2 shits if they could have made 2% more/yr investing everything in growth as they fall asleep next to their bags of dividend money.
Besides you should have a mix of both anyway, but regardless, this was just to point out how dumb the whole "tax problem" with dividends is, because the majority of people who do invest aren't going to be paying any for a very long time. And it's not like growth stocks don't need to pay taxes when they actually are selling their shares.
You get taxed when you cash in your growth too so you aren't saving on taxes just adjusting the timing. You may get better tax-adjusted returns with dividends because you are spreading your income over many years (depending on your specific bracket and whether they are qualified dividends or not).
Dividend in post tax, growth in pre tax. Keep it simple 🍻
@@BlackPaladin2 Correct, you have to pay taxes later when you sell, the emphasis is on later and in the meantime the tax deferral effect can continue to work, which is limited with mandatory payments on dividends.
"Most people who do invest in dividends aren't going to give 2 shits if they could have made 2% more/yr investing everything in growth as they fall asleep next to their bags of dividend money."
Do you know most people?
You certainly make good points and are level headed. I'll admit I am one of those people who generally warn new investors away from buying dividend yielding funds "for the dividends" with the types of comments you said are often given. Even after watching your video though I would say that on the average growth stocks outperform dividend stocks. That is not to say you should never buy dividend stocks, dividend stocks tend to be much less volatile....so its a good way to mitigate volatility as you approach retirement. I would still caution a young investor away from prioritizing dividend yielding stocks though. I also wouldnt prioritize growth over dividends. I would just prioritize total return, diversity across sectors and later on in investing reduced volatility which will probably include value funds.
This kind of video is what I like the most about your channel. These broader issues about investing. I'm struggling exactly about this issue: pros and cons of different investment strategies, thinking of the long term.
Nice, glad it's helpful!
Dude ignore these youtube clowns, this guy isn't even licensed. Find a FINRA certified CFP fee based financial advisor. Fidelity Investments is one of the best broker dealers.
Totally depends. Here in Germany you have around 1000€ per year tax free in either stock earnings, dividends or whatever. So it actually is sensible to realize either some winnings or just cash in dividends. Also a lot of companies offer to pay dividends in additional stock which might be attractive as well. I use dividends for the tax break, personally and then reinvest. I also like the option (in the far future) to live off my dividends and let them trickle in over the course of the year instead of selling chunks of my stocks. But that's just personal "flavor" I think
if you refuse to sell shares dividends are the only option if you want to see something from your investment
if i had 1 billion in google stock but absolutely refused to sell what do I really have?
I definitely think one of the bigger challenges is knowing when to sell in those cases. I always struggled with that. Part of why I enjoy dividend growers that are also great companies. The plan is to hold until their story changes and get paid along the way.
@@justinjohnson8398 Oy.
You have $1B in stock you could borrow against if you refuse to sell.
Or you could have other investments.
But ok, extreme examples though that apply to practically nobody on the planet.
I've been asking that for ages. You can't buy yourself a banana muffin at the coffee shop.@@justinjohnson8398
Yesterday, Halloween, the market happened to be off and I "lost" over 1%
Today, the 1st of the month, I realized $ 1200+ in dividends and interest.
Tonight I will sleep soundly.
Unfun fact: in Brazil you pay ZERO taxes on dividends.
Con: You also have to live in Brazil
@@wtfr3nch no you don't
The only one Dividend Stock RUclips Channel I listen to without skipping it.
Total return trumps dividend investing.
With much higher risk. There is a sleep at night tax.
This is why it’s important to invest in preferred shares if you want to collect dividend and common stock if you want growth. Alternatively Index funds are the next best options.
There are numerous ways to be involved with the stock market. For the younger crowd, it makes sense to be long in growth stocks. For someone like me, pushing 60 and only recently acquiring enough money to work with, I am more concerned with a steady income stream. Having a portfolio of (non-dividend) growth stocks will not pay my monthly bills. Comparing the the two groups is like comparing apples/oranges. Those that look negatively on dividend stocks aren't considering the fact that many use portfolios of dividend stocks for income streams. You can't lump everyone into one single category and say, "this is the best way to invest your money", or "this is the best stock to own". Personally, I have a nice portfolio of solid dividend stocks that are currently averaging 5%. I sell calls (conservatively), which allows me to add another 2%-3%.
Great points throughout this video. The bottom line is always, discipline and have a plan. Always dollar cost average. Do not try to time the market. Buy what you know. If you wouldn't own that stock for a decade, you shouldn't own it for a day.