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Understanding the Stock
Market
An
old definition of investing was getting INCOME, a return on investment,
with little risk. Today, that definition is gone because speculation is
popular. Income is supposedly bad, capital gains are good. The reality
is annual total returns since 1820 have had around 35% to 40% of the
total return from dividends.
“Payment of dividends to stockholders is the primary aim of
managers of corporate industry and commerce. For this reason the value
of stocks should be measured largely by dividend rates.” The
quote was from the book Understanding
the Stock Market written by Alliston Cragg and published
in April of 1929. Times and preferences change. Today, some say the
only good thing about dividends is some of them have a low income tax
rate. This will change as baby boomers need steady income to live on
rather than occasional capital gains.
Companies that raise their dividends over time will usually have their
stock price rise and their price usually drops less than non-dividend
paying stocks. With reinvestment of dividends, your investments can
compound faster than no dividend reinvestment.
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