Bootcamp Bonus: Why Dividends Need To Be Your New BFF

Hello!

Welcome to the BONUS lesson of Investing Bootcamp!

I love my friends. Most are kind, two are funny. Three are generous, and another is shrewd. But my BFF? That friend would be my dividends.

Haven’t been introduced to dividends yet?

As you know from Lesson #5 (So You Want To Own Stocks? Me Too.), if an investor purchases shares in a company, she becomes an owner of that company. As a refresher, if The Awesome Lipstick Company has 10,000 shares outstanding, and your Aunt Beatrice buys 1000 shares, she then owns 10 percent of the firm. In a perfect world, The Awesome Lipstick Company will have plenty of revenues. After expenses and taxes, there will be a remaining pile of money, which is called income.

Companies have several choices of what to do with these funds. Many will reinvest much of the income back into the business itself. This reinvestment can include the creation of new products (eye shadow?!), hiring more staff, update computers, etc. However, many of these companies will return a portion of earnings to the shareholders.

That’s Aunt Beatrice, and these are dividends.

If in 2016, The Awesome Lipstick Company declared a dividend for $1.04 per share, and Aunt Beatrice continues to hold her 1000 shares, she can expect to receive $260 every three months. At the end of 2016, in addition to any gains (or losses) in the price of the stock, $1,040 would have been deposited to her bank account. In cash.

Why Dividend Stocks Dominate My Portfolio

  • Studies have proven stocks that pay dividends outperform stocks that do not pay dividends. What does this mean? Some investors prefer growth stocks over dividend paying stocks. The theory being that a firm that reinvests 100 percent of income (as opposed to only 90 percent) into the company grows faster. And over time, this growth would result in a higher stock price. As I said, history has shown these investors to be wrong: dividends have accounted for over 42 percent of total stock market return since 1930.
  • While I support reinvesting your dividends back into stock purchases (called Dividend Reinvestment Plan, or DRIP), there is a tremendous benefit having your new BFF give you money in the form of cash. This benefit would be having access to extra income when needed. Many a wise and wealthy woman is living comfortably today on a pension supplemented by dividend income from stocks she bought in her forties.
  • When investors invest in Canadian stocks, the government is happy. Accordingly, the government has mandated that you will pay less tax on income you receive in the form of dividends. So now your new BFF is not just depositing money into your account on a regular basis, but the government is letting you keep more of that money.

Still not convinced?

A ton of dividend paying companies in Canada have a long history of increasing the dividends they pay to shareholders. Many of these firms have raised their dividend almost each and every year. Can you imagine? A BFF that just keeps on giving?

My proposition to you is that you start to invest. And high-quality dividend stocks with a track record of increasing their dividend payouts are a fantastic place to start.

Choose your friends and your stocks wisely.

And that, my Investing Loves, is our final lesson together. I trust that the lessons over the past 30 days have proven valuable to you. My intention was to provide you with a foundation to get started and (I hoped) to ignite desire and passion for continuing your investing journey.  

If you would like to continue the journey with me (I would love to have you!), you can find my advanced intermediate and master class options at http://zerotoportfolio.com.

Be well and invest well, 

Nanci