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25459545 No.25459545 [Reply] [Original]

Is dividend stock investing retarded? I like the idea of having steady stream of income. But I'm assuming I'd need like 1 million dollars in stocks to be able to do it / retire

anyone know any good sites / recommendations for dividend stocks?

shitcoiners don't reply to my thread

>> No.25459594

Why are u showing that little girls underwear u fucking pervert

>> No.25459639

>>25459545
bump. i have around 200k. wondering if thats substantial enough

>> No.25459741

>>25459639
Not even close

Dividend stocks have 4 - 6% dividend

If you have a million dollars, that’s only 40 to 60 thousand a year

>> No.25459743

dividends range from 3-8%. do the math. most dividend stocks are damn boring and dont gain much value

>> No.25459806

>>25459545
>are dividend stocks retarded
yes

>> No.25459840

It's not retarded but its better to look for stocks with higher potential growth than focus on dividend returns

>> No.25459871

>>25459840
like which ones

>> No.25459882

If you DRIP you can accumulate a large stack of a stock relatively quickly.

>> No.25459959

>>25459871
TSLA, obviosuly

>> No.25459968

>>25459545
>>25459639
focus on growing your wealth first with growth stocks before switching to dividend stocks since they barely go up in value and you will have to pay taxes on dividends.

>> No.25460001

>>25459959
>overpriced meme company

>> No.25460025

>>25459743
My SLVO bags beg to differ these last few months. Which is not to say that I expect to retire from them.

>> No.25460046

>>25459545
Genetics down the toilet. Why?

>> No.25460094

Dividend stocks are a waste unless you're an old boomer. If you're 40 take some fuckin risks and make money.

>> No.25460104

Anybody still in WKHS? I bought last week

>> No.25460230

>>25459741
US salaries are so weird, here in the Netherlands 60.000$ or around 45-50k euro's a year would give you a very high standard of living.

Even 2000 euro after tax, would be plentyful if you have a working partner and/or a paid off house.

>> No.25460239

>>25460104
Oops wrong thread. Divis aren't that useless, I use them to offset my brokers expenses. Look at REITs for a highpayout percentage in dividends. Downside is slow growth and share dilution

>> No.25460276

>>25459545
genes wasted, then again she must've been pretty low iq to match with a nigger, so maybe the trash just took itself out. slide thread, all fields

>> No.25460333

>>25459871
well thats the game, aint it.
But, if youre asking me to pick a stock for you to hold longterm.. I would say Disney (DIS)
They own all the big movies, and Disney+ will defeat Netflix.

DISCLAIMER: i dont own DIS shares. Im not like those cryptofag spammers, who are always selling you their bags.

>> No.25460666

>>25460046
>expecting women to think ahead

>> No.25460668

If you like the idea of steady income without too much risk I would recommend div stocks. I’ve read and been taught that div stocks out perform the S&P. It’s much easier for people to value these kinds of stocks since most financial models people use for them are valuing the dividends that they pay.

If you are about to start to build your div portfolio and you don’t expect to have to cash out the money you invested then finding stocks that pay a div yield of 2-4% but they have a large dividend growth rate (8-10%) you will see your yield on cost get surprisingly comfy over the span of 10-40 years

>> No.25460904

Dividend focused strategies are retarded unless you like zero growth. Finding growth companies will always outperform dividend portfolios. Companies that pay out a decent dividend are either dinosaurs who are in the mature stage of business cycle that will never innovate and grow or energy companies that can go bankrupt in a flash. Focusing only on dividends is a trap that many, many people fall into.

>> No.25460944

>>25460668
Also there is the stigma that dividend investors usually hold for the long-term and go dick loving crazy when they see their senpai stock are trading at “bargain” prices. Both of these makes these types of stocks less volatile then the overall market.

Consumer staples, utilities, cig companies, alcohol companies, defense contractors are types of companies that you might consider when building one of these portfolios. Popular picks are JnJ, McDonald’s, Pepsi and Coca Cola, AT&T, Philip Morris, Duke energy, Raytheon

>> No.25460947

>>25459545
But where is her father?

>> No.25461009

>>25460947
Prison.

>> No.25461123

>>25460944
Companies that are able to pay dividends for years and years are usually solid companies that have smart management and rock solid balance sheets

>> No.25461317

>>25459545
>Is dividend stock investing retarded?
No
>I'm assuming I'd need like 1 million dollars in stocks to be able to do it / retire
Minimum

If you want retire ASAP and living of your investments is your goal, you need to either take risk (growth stocks, options and/or crypto) or you need to have a high salary and live frugally so you can invest large amounts. Trying to live of dividends with 50-500k investments means noodle dinners, dumpster diving and craigslist clothes.

>> No.25461388

The question you need to do is actually:

Is dividend strategy based compared with just knowing a little bit about what "dividends" mean? And the answer is not.

The strategy of dividends are just like:

> Buy something
> Hold
> It's profits will come to you

And that's it, there's no magic. Why this happens? Easy: if profits grow, the yield would be too high, and in this case, is just distribute some dividend and your shareholders will keep their money in the enterprise cuz is easy money.

*OR (as it actually happens)*

Market just see that there's a dip in the area, and prices go up, in this case, your equity grow.

So that's it, any stock can just award its shareholders by many ways: repurchasing shares, paying dividends, giving shares...

>> No.25461490

>>25459545
It depends. At lunch money levels who cares. At two commas and up it can make sense as part of a balanced portfolio e.g. income supplementation but not all of the portfolio.

>> No.25461554

I recommend ticker ORC. Nice steady dividend. I use DRIP to automatically reinvest the dividends.

>> No.25462182

>>25461554
Woah. 14% dividend. That's pretty wild.

>> No.25462607

>>25459959
The stage was set
>>25460001
>He entered