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Top Dividend Paying Stocks That Keep On Climbing
1.
2. Welcome to Dividend Stocks Research
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Reviews of the best dividends stocks
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please visit our website
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3. Hi, My name is Aaron and I‘m with
Dividend Stocks Research, today were
reviewing our recently published article…
5. Wondering how to find the top dividend
stocks that will keep on climbing?
Want to find the best dividend paying
stocks where the actual dividend will
grow along with the price of the stock
itself?
6. Isn’t that too much to ask for? Kind of
like Joe DiMaggio expecting Marilyn
Monroe to cook?
(She couldn’t. Their marriage lasted 3
years.)
7. History shows us that you can have it
both ways.
You actually can find dividend stocks to
buy that will increase in value and keep
the dividend growing.
8. One way is to find companies that grow
their earnings year after year.
This is why dividend investors have had a
longstanding love affair with utility
stocks.
Even when earnings growth is modest,
consistent growth provides a nice payoff.
9. What you give up with a utility stock is
capital appreciation... the stock price
tends to stay steady. And share price
volatility tends to stay low.
But when earnings grow, the cash flow
stays healthy, and the dividend grows,
even by just a little bit each year...
10. It doesn’t take long for the profits of the
top dividend paying stocks to start
steamrolling.
12. When you look at any company, big or
small, whether it’s an upstart newcomer
or a long-time performer, try to get a feel
for the future.
13. Some of these young companies that pay
dividends probably shouldn’t be. It would
be more prudent to pay off debt or sink
profits back into growing the business.
Look at Apple $AAPL.
14. It dumped its dividend in 2005, the year
the stock split, then brought it back in
2012. Since then the dividend has been
growing. Dividend growth was 15% in
2013, and 8% in 2014.
15. Apple is a great example of a company
that’s made the transition from Young
Turk, growth-oriented upstart to mature
company.
16. In a way, Apple is still one of the best
dividend growth stocks even though the
days of growing pains are in the past.
Is Apple one of the top dividend paying
stocks you should look at? Sure, and
here’s why.
17. The dividend is growing, the dividend
payout ratio is a poster child at 23%, and
the yield isn’t bad, at 1.6%.
18. Why would I say, “The yield isn’t bad”
when it’s down below 2%?
Dividend growth. Apple has plenty of
money, and plenty of opportunity to grow
the dividend. This is the combo you want
to look for when you’re sizing up the top
dividend paying stocks.
19. But let’s face it.
A lot of investors believe that when Apple
stumbles, and a new product launch falls
short of expectations, the stock will take a
hit... perhaps a terrible hit.
20. If Apple doesn’t sell one of its new
watches to everyone you know, is this
viewed as a tragic failure?
It could be. The market is irrational.
Punishments are doled out without
reason.
21. This irrational market behavior is
something you can never forget when
you’re investing in the top dividend
stocks... or any stocks.
So the smartest investors use this to their
advantage.
23. Benjamin Graham was Warren Buffet’s
first boss, and had more to do with
shaping Buffet’s investment approach
than anyone.
Graham was always comfortable chalking
market movement up to reasons that
didn’t make any sense.
24. He knew better than most that emotions
and feelings were a big part of how stocks
were priced, and how the market’s overall
direction was set.
Graham said...
25. “The most realistic distinction between
the investor and the speculator is found in
their attitude toward stock-market
movements. The speculator's primary
interest lies in anticipating and profiting
from market fluctuations.
26. The investor's primary interest lies in
acquiring and holding suitable securities
at suitable prices. Market movements are
important to him in a practical sense,
because they alternately create low price
levels at which he would be wise to buy
and high price levels at which he certainly
28. I love Graham’s phrase, “...acquiring and
holding suitable securities at suitable
prices.”
That’s what it’s all about, isn’t it?
(Unless you’re out to make a fast buck.)
29. So when it comes to the best dividend
stocks, we should figure out what’s
“suitable.”
First, what’s suitable for you might not be
suitable for me. You might be looking to
pump some extra income into an existing
portfolio with some high yield stocks.
30. Or you might be looking to add some
stability with one of the S&P 500 Dividend
Aristocrats.
Whatever kind of yield you’ve got in mind,
and if you’re looking for a stock that will
keep on climbing, think long-term.
32. The top dividend paying stocks will
reward you two ways... with growing
dividends and a growing share price.
Over time, the two add up, even when the
share price doesn’t do much.
33. Since 1926, according to Ibbotson
Associates, more than 40% of the
market’s total return has come from the
dividends.
34. This is why I’m not gung ho on high yields
or soaring prices.
One place you can look for dividend
stocks like this is on the lineup of the
NASDAQ Dividend Achievers. There are
more than 200 of these stocks and these
days, most of them are pretty expensive.
35. That’s what happens when you’ve got a
bull market that’s been on a six-year tear.
There’s a good case to be made for the
market running out of steam, and for
sitting back, waiting for a correction.
36. Well, that’s good thinking... but only if
you’re thinking about buying a broad
market index ETF like the SPDR S&P 500
ETF Trust $SPY.
37. It’s not good thinking when you look at
different industries, where a lot of stocks
have been beat up badly, and are actually
cheaper than they were a year ago.
One of the industries that’s been beaten
to a pulp is energy.
38. Check out Chevron $CVX and Exxon
Mobil $XOM, two S&P 500 Dividend
Aristocrats.
39. And if you like the idea of prowling
through the oil patch to discover some of
the top paying dividend stocks that aren’t
in the limelight, let me give you an
example.
40. Helmerich & Payne $HP is an Oklahoma
outfit that pays a 4.59% dividend. It’s in
the contract drilling business and sinks
wells in South America, Africa, and the
Middle East.
41. You can buy it cheap. The P/E Ratio is
9.2. Not bad, about half of what the
overall market goes for.
42. The hitch... the dividend payout ratio is
high... 94.2%. But the Helmerich & Payne
track record is impeccable... these guys
know how to ride out a storm. The stock
has been paying a growing dividend for
42 years.
43. But talk about a stock that’s out of favor...
take a look at what Helmerich & Payne
was trading for just last summer...
44.
45. An uptick in oil prices, an upsurge in
exploration and drilling, and a company
like Helmerich & Payne is on fire.
Sure, the yield will go down as the share
price goes up. But for folks who pick it up
now, it’s got everything you need for an
income flamethrower.
47. Growing dividends and a growing share
price. Too much to ask for?
Dividend stocks that keep raising
dividends are out there. You just want to
dodge the temptations of the overpriced
market and go find them.
48. And while you’re avoiding expensive
stocks, steer clear of high yields that will
be tough for companies to keep paying.
49. Look for good companies like Helmerich
& Payne that are out of favor.
That’s how to get the most from your
dividend stocks.