Showing posts with label dividend reinvestment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dividend reinvestment. Show all posts

Saturday 29 April 2017

Return Characteristics of Equity Securities

The two main sources of an equity security's total return are:

  • Capital gains from price appreciation
  • Dividend income
The total return on non-dividend paying stocks only consists of capital gains.

Investors in depository receipts and foreign shares also incur foreign exchange gains (or losses).

Another source of return arises from the compounding effects of reinvested dividends.

Friday 23 August 2013

Dividend Reinvestment Plans (DRIPs) and the Value Investor

1.  Dividend reinvestment plans (DRIPs) are often programs run commission-free by individual companies, enabling investors to regularly reinvest dividend payments in new shares and to increase holdings.

2.  DRIPs are useful to impose self-discipline for those otherwise easily distracted from adding principal to their investment resources - not a value investing trait but DRIPs can be attractive to value investors for their convenience.

3.  Dividends paid on account shares are automatically reinvested when declared, rather than paid to the holder.

4.  For regular dividend-paying companies, this can mean steady additions to equity securities.  

5.  DRIPs also typically offer holders the chance to have funds automatically taken from bank accounts at designated times to buy additional shares.

6.  Investors can set dates to follow paydays, creating additional discipline that yields substantial sums.

7.  A key benefit of the steadiness of DRIP funding is that dollars are invested at regular intervals, when price is below value and when above.

8.  If maintained over a long period, these discrepancies result in owning shares purchased at an average cost lower than the average of the prices on each purchase date.  Hence the term "dollar cost averaging."

9.  While certainly not pure value investing, DRIP's dollar-cost-averaging can produce impressive investing gains.  

10.  And there are value investing attributes of using DRIPs.

11.  DRIPs and dollar cost averaging reduce the number of decisions an investor must make.  

12.  They are also attractive because few stocks meet properly defined value investing criteria.

13.  Value investors monitor the fundamentals of the businesses and only take action to stop buying or to sell when preset fundamental factors have deteriorated to preset levels.  

Sunday 15 July 2012

Five Basic Fundamental Investing Principles



History has demonstrated that there are five basic principles that 
you should follow if you want to be truly successful.


Invest Regularly in the Stock Market

Reinvest all of Your Profits and Dividends

Invest for the Long Term

Invest Only in Good Quality Growth Companies

Diversify Your Portfolio

Saturday 23 June 2012

Financial Planning and Reinvesting Your Passive Income




Reinvest money from passive income





My Cash Flow Framework



Cash Flow Diagram


HAVE YOU STARTED YOUR JOURNEY TOWARDS FINANCIAL FREEDOM?


No, what is financial freedom?
  7 (6%)
No, I don't intend to start my journey.
  1 (0%)
No, but I am preparing to start my journey.
  26 (25%)
Yes, I have just started my journey.
  40 (39%)
Yes, I am half-way in my journey.
  17 (16%)
Yes, I have achieved financial freedom already.
  10 (9%)



Source:  




Thursday 15 December 2011

Lessons from a Secret Multi-Millionaire: How Anne Scheiber Amassed $22 Million From Her Apartment

By Joshua Kennon, About.com Guide

In the mid 1940’s, Anne Scheiber retired from the IRS where she worked as an auditor. Using a $5,000 lump sum she had saved, and a pension of roughly $3,150, over the next 50+ years, she built a fortune from her tiny New York apartment that exceeded $22,000,000 upon her death in 1995 when she left the funds to Yeshiva University for a scholarship designed to help support deserving women. Here are some of the lessons we can learn from this ordinary woman that achieved extraordinary wealth.

1. Do your own research

Sheiber was burnt by brokers during the 1930’s so she resolved to never rely on anyone for her own financial future. Using her experience with the Internal Revenue Service, she analyzed stocks, bonds, and other assets. The result: She owned only companies with which she was comfortable. When markets collapse, one of the best ways to stay the course and maintain your investment program is to know why you own a stock, how much you think it is worth, and if the market is undervaluing it in your opinion.

2. Buy shares of excellent companies

When you’re really in this for the long-haul, you want to own excellent businesses that have durable competitive advantages, generate lots of cash, high returns on capital, have owner-oriented management, and strong balance sheets. Think about everything that has changed in the past one hundred years! We went from horse and buggies to cars to space travel, the Internet, nuclear knowledge, and a whole lot more. Yet, people still drink Coca-Cola. They still shave with Gillette razors. They still chew Wrigley gum. They still buy Johnson & Johnson products.

3. Reinvest your dividends

One of the biggest flaws with both professional and amateur investors is that they focus on changes in market capitalization or share price only. With most mature, stable companies, a substantial part of the profits are returned to shareholders in the form of cash dividends. That means you cannot measure the ultimate wealth created for investors by looking at increases in the stock price.

Famed finance professor Jeremy Siegel called reinvested dividends the “bear market protector” and “return accelerator” as they allow you to buy more shares of the company when markets crash. Over time, this drastically increases the equity you own in the company and the dividends you receive as those shares pay dividends; it’s a virtuous cycle. In most cases, the fees or costs for reinvesting dividends are either free or a nominal few dollars. This means that more of your return goes to compounding and less to frictional expenses.

4. Don’t be afraid of asset allocation

According to some sources, Anne Scheiber died with 60% of her money invested in stocks, 30% in bonds, and 10% in cash. For those of you who are unfamiliar with the concept of asset allocation, the basic idea is that it is wise for non-professional investors to keep their money divided between different types of securities such as stocks, bonds, mutual funds, international, cash, and real estate. The premise is that changes in one market won’t ripple through your entire net worth.

5. Add to your investments regularly

Regular saving and investing is important because it allows you to pick up additional stocks that fit your criteria. In addition to the first investment Scheiber made, she regularly contributed to her portfolio from the small pension she received.

6. Let your money compound uninterrupted for a very long time

Probably the biggest reason Anne Scheiber was able to amass such as substantial fortune was that she allowed the money to compound for of half a century. No, that doesn’t mean you have to live the life of a monk or deny yourself the things you want. What it means is that you learn to let your money work for you instead of constantly striving to scrape by, barely meeting expenses and maintaining your standard of living.




To learn about the power of compounding, read Pay for Retirement with a Cup of Coffee and an Egg McMuffin. With only small amounts, time can turn even the smallest sums into princely treasures.

http://beginnersinvest.about.com/od/investorsmoneymanagers/a/Anne_Scheiber.htm

Wednesday 14 December 2011

Guinness Anchor Christmas cheer: Remember to Reinvest the Special Dividend



Investing is simple, but not easy.  Here is the rough calculation of the returns from Guinness for those who bought and held for the long term.
20.8.1992  Bought Guinness @ 4.38
13.12.2011  Guinness is trading @ 12.98
Investing period:  19 years
Capital gains:  8.60
Capital gains CAGR:  5.88%
Dividends paid in 1992:  36.4 sen  DY based on cost:  8.31%
Dividends paid in 2011:  54 sen  DY based on cost:  12.33%
Average DY over the last 19 years:  10.3%
Total average yearly return from Guinness = 5.88% (capital gain) + 10.3% (dividend) = 16.2%.

This is yet another stock that has returned 15% per year to its shareholders over many years consistently.


The total average return per year from Guinness = 16.2%.  
Let us translate this into CAG returns over the 19 year period.

Assuming the dividends were not reinvested into Guinness:
The total returns from this investment are as follow:
At end of 19 years, the 4.38 initial investment would have grown to 12.96.
The amount of dividend collected over the 19 years was 8.94.
Therefore, the initial 4.38 has become 12.96+8.94 = 21.90 over 19 years.
This gives a CAGR of 8.84%.

The DY of Guinness over many years range from 5.4% to 7.0% (average 6%).  

Assuming the dividends were reinvested at the end of each financial period back into Guinness and that theaverage DY was 6% for each investing year.
At the end of 19 years, the 4.38 initial investment would have grown to 41.60.
This gives a CAGR of 12.58%.

Assuming the dividends were reinvested at the end of each financial period back into Guinness and the DY for each period was the lowest of 4% for the 19 years.
At the end of 19 years, the 4.38 initial investment would have grown to 28.42.
This gives a CAGR of 10.34%.


.. and if you have bought GAB in Jun 2008 ...

Counter   Purchase Date   Price      Current Price       
GAB      04-Jun-08           5.35           13.14

Total % gain (excluding dividends)  145.6%.
This is a CAGR of 25.19% over 4 year period or 35% over 3 year period in its share price, excluding dividends.   Smiley


There are times when you can buy these great stocks cheap.  You will get fantastic returns over the initial few years of your "good 
timing pricing" in your investing.  Over the long period, the returns will attenuate to those of what the stock delivers over its long term.


(The above calculations of returns exclude special dividends.)

A surprisingly large part of the overall growth in most portfolios comes from reinvested dividends rather than in appreciation of the stock prices. A yield of 3% may appear small but over a period it makes a big difference. Choose some investments with a solid history of dividends and use them as the ballast in your ship.
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Wednesday December 14, 2011

Guinness Anchor Christmas cheer


Special dividend higher than last year’s full dividend
GUINNESS Anchor Bhd's (GAB) shareholders are getting some Christmas cheer when it came to light on Monday that the brewery will be disbursing a special single-tier dividend of 60 sen per 50 sen share for the financial year ending June 30, 2012 (FY12), which, notably, is even higher than its full-year FY11 dividend per share (DPS) of 54 sen.
If you were paying attention though, this would not have been a total surprise. StarBiz had previously reported in October that GAB's management was looking at ways to reward shareholders, a move not uncommon among cash-rich brewers.
A report by OSK Research analyst Jeremy Goh on Nov 29 had highlighted the possibility of a higher dividend, either through a higher payout ratio or special dividend. “In fact, we do not discount the possibility of a special dividend,” he said at the time, adding that GAB has a cash pile of RM164mil, or 54 sen per share.
In a follow-up report, Goh said that with the just-announced dividend, the DPS for FY12 would almost double from 61 sen to RM1.21, based on a 90% payout rate. This, he said, translated to a “very attractive yield” of 9.9%.
But in Malaysia's relatively small beer market where two players dominate GAB's latest move inevitably prompts the question: will its closest rival,Carlsberg Brewery Malaysia Bhd, soon do the same?
Carlsberg's shareholders might seem to think so. While both shares were on the top gainers list yesterday, with GAB adding 70 sen to RM12.98 and Carlsberg 31 sen to RM8.46, the latter's stock traded more than twice as heavily. As many as 469,700 Carlsberg shares changed hands versus GAB's 221,600 shares.
Analysts, however, are not counting on a bumper dividend from Carlsberg. As at Sept 30, it had RM82.7mil in cash and RM94.2mil in loans and borrowings as opposed to GAB, which had zero debt and RM164mil in cash and cash equivalents.
An analyst said that based on historical performance, Carlsberg's dividend payout averaged 50% to 70% against GAB, which paid out 90% of its earnings in FY11.
Nonetheless, Carlsberg did reward shareholders with a 58 sen dividend last year after it acquired Carlsberg Singapore Pte Ltd for RM370mil in the fourth quarter 2009.
Another analyst pointed out that while Carlsberg and GAB were fierce competitors, they had not been known to compete on the dividend front.
On the rationale for GAB's distribution of a special dividend, analysts said it was to optimise the brewery's capital structure. An analyst explained that GAB had to choose between making an acquisition or capital management, and since the choice of acquisition targets in Malaysia was limited, it opted to distribute cash to shareholders.
“Even when Carlsberg made an acquisition last time, it was in Singapore,” she noted.
GAB also recently proposed to issue RM500mil in debt notes for capital expenditure (capex) and working capital. Of the RM80mil-RM100mil capex to be spent in FY12, RM40mil has been apportioned to a new packaging line and RM30mil to upgrade its information technology infrastructure. The debt papers were given an AAA rating by RAM Ratings.
OSK's Goh, in his Nov 29 report, had also said that GAB was debt-free prior to the debt issuance, which raised its weighted average cost of capital (WACC) to 7.1%. The new debt notes, he said, would bring its WACC down to a more efficient 5.4%, assuming an effective tax rate of 25%, and the company's debt to equity ratio to 47:53.
On whether another extraordinary dividend was in the offing from GAB, its finance director Mahendran Kapuppial told StarBiz: “We do not have any plans for further special dividends.
“Historically, we have paid between 85% and 90% of our profit after tax as normal dividends to our shareholders and we do expect this to continue in the future. Looking at our current debt to equity ratio, the board felt that a one-off special cash dividend is appropriate.”


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Why Buy and Hold Will Always Be a Sound Investing Strategy

It seems like the debate regarding the merits of the "buy-and-hold" investing strategy is alive and well. We always find these discussions amusing, because we believe that it is such a pointless discussion. There is no general argument or case that can be made to support the buy-and-hold strategy or to negate it.

The only true answer to the buy-and-hold argument is it depends on what and/or when you buy-and-hold.

  • If you buy the right company at the right price, then buy-and-hold is a great strategy. 
  • If you buy the wrong company at any price, then the buy-and-hold strategy is a dumb move. 
  • Also, if you buy the right company at the wrong price, then buy-and-hold would once again be a bad move.


Sunday 25 July 2010

The power of compounding from Reinvested Dividends

The two charts below show the cumulative return of a dollar for the S&P 500 Index on a price only basis and total return that includes reinvested dividends since 1926. The second chart shows the power of compounding on a percentage basis.



Saturday 24 July 2010

The results of reinvesting dividends




http://www.dividend.com/dividend-stock-library/dividend_reinvestment_plans.php

The Importance of Dividends




Although many investors consider the current 2% yield offered by the S&P 500 to be trivial, it would be a huge mistake to dismiss dividends. In fact, a look back at statistical data over the past 75 years shows that nearly half of the market's total returns have come in the form of dividends. Between 1926 and 2004, dividends represented approximately 42% of the total return delivered by the S&P 500. Over that same span, it's been calculated that $1,000 invested in the S&P would have grown to $2.3 million if reinvested dividends are included, but only $90,000 without the dividends.

If history is any guide, then dividend-paying stocks should also perform better than their non-paying counterparts over the long haul. Contrary to conventional wisdom, studies have shown that dividend payers handily outperformed non-payers from 1970 to 2000. At the same time, those same dividend-paying stocks experienced far less volatility. They could also be counted on to deliver stronger relative returns in difficult market environments. What's more, according to the latest data from Standard & Poor's, dividend-payers are still outpacing non-payers in today’s volatile marketplace.



SNC Lavalin Dividend
An example of looking at dividend (above graph)
Dividend growth has been steady but not spectacular.

http://web.streetauthority.com/cmnts/pt/2006/02-15.asp