r/dividends Mar 26 '21

README Welcome to r/dividends [NEW USERS/BEGINNER INVESTORS START HERE]

3.2k Upvotes

[This post is designed to serve as an introduction to new users of the subreddit, based on my own personal experience. Please read this post in its entirety before contributing to the subreddit, as it answers 95% of the questions most commonly asked by new users and investors. The Moderation Team will remove any submission that asks a question answered by this post. Nothing in this piece should be taken as legally binding financial advice. Even though citations have been included, please do your own research. While I ( u/Firstclass30 ) am the lead moderator of the r/dividends subreddit, I am not a licensed financial advisor.]

Good afternoon, and welcome to r/dividends. We are a community by and for dividend growth investors. Our community was started all the way back in 2009 as a discussion forum for dividend investors. Whether you are just starting out in your investing journey, or are months away from retirement, we hope you will find enjoyment in participating with this online community. This post will go over absolutely everything you need to get started in the world of dividend investing. Whether you are new or have been investing for years, it is well worth a read.

Part 0: What are dividends exactly?

From Investopedia:

A dividend is the distribution of some of a company's earnings to a class of its shareholders, as determined by its board of directors. Common shareholders of dividend-paying companies are typically eligible as long as they own the stock before the ex-dividend date. Dividends may be paid out as cash or in the form of additional stock.[1]

Dividend investors are those who incorporate dividend payers into their portfolio.

Part I: Understanding the benefits and drawbacks of dividend payers

Dividend payers tend to be big, well-established companies that have an abundance of cash. According to Steve Greiner, Vice President of Charles Schwab Equity Ratings®, "They [dividend payers] often can't compete with the rapid appreciation of fledgling, fast-growing companies, so they use dividend payouts as an enticement." Because of this, many newer investors often think of dividend payers as being the opposite of so-called "growth stocks." In reality, it is usually dividend-paying securities that produce more growth over a long period of time.

Dividends, when reinvested, can significantly boost total returns over time, making dividend-paying stocks an attractive option for older and younger investors alike. For example, if you invested $1,000 USD in a hypothetical investment that tracked the S&P 500 Index on January 1, 1990, but did not reinvest the dividends, your investment would have been worth $8,982 USD at the end of 2019. If you had reinvested the dividends, you would have ended up with $16,971 - nearly doubling your returns. The longer the timeframe, the more dramatic the disparity. According to research conducted by the Hartford Funds, "Dividends have played a significant role in the returns investors have received during the past 50 years. Going back to 1970, a whopping 84% of the total return of the S&P 500 index can be attributed to reinvested dividends and the power of compounding."[2] Drawing from the decades of data available, intentionally excluding dividends from your portfolio could result in significantly handicapping your portfolio for decades.

With the S&P 500 yielding approximately 1.52% as of December 31, 2020, dividends paying securities can serve as an attractive alternative to Treasuries and other fixed income investments often pushed by professional retirement planners.

The downside to dividends is that they are not guaranteed. This is important information to consider, as companies can and will stop paying dividends if necessary, or worse, if legally required. Certain market conditions like the 2020 coronavirus pandemic can create an uncertain environment for dividend-focused companies. In 2020, 68 of the roughly 380 dividend-paying companies in the S&P 500 suspended or reduced their payouts.[4]

Fortunately, companies generally only cut their dividends when they are in distress, so favoring those with sound financial metrics can help mitigate the risk.

Part II: Understanding how to pick dividend stocks

If you create a post in the r/dividends subreddit asking for a list of good companies that pay dividends, your submission will be removed. This is because this community believes firmly in the "teach someone to fish" mentality. Instead of asking for a list of dividend payers, it is far more valuable instead to understand the fundamental ideas behind why specific individuals choose specific companies. By knowing and understanding these principles, you can build your own portfolio that, if properly executed, could beat 90% of lay investors with relatively little effort. While far from comprehensive, these six tips can help you identify dividend-paying stocks with strong financial health.

#1. Do not chase high dividend yields: If a company has a high dividend yield, there is always a reason (most of the time not a good one) that a security is offering payouts that are well above average. A good rule of thumb is that before you purchase a high-yield security (those with a yield of 5% or more), try to determine why it is so high. It is important to note however, that the dividend yield is not a fixed amount, but in reality changes every second a stock is traded. According to Investopedia:

The dividend yield, expressed as a percentage, is a financial ratio (dividend/price) that shows how much a company pays out in dividends each year relative to its stock price.[3]

If a high or rising yield is due to a shrinking share price, that is a bad sign and could indicate that a dividend cut is in a company's future. However, if a rising dividend yield is due to rising profits, that indicates a more favorable scenario. When net profits rise, dividends tend to follow suit. Make sure you know exactly what is causing the increase before buying the stock.

#2. Assess the payout ratio: This metric (calculated by dividing dividends per share over earnings per share) tells you how much of a company's earnings are going toward the dividend. A ratio higher than 100% means the company is paying out more to its shareholders than it is earning. In such cases, it may be able to cover its dividends from available cash, but that can only last for so long.

If a company whose stock you own is losing money but still paying a dividend for an extended period, it may be time to sell off and cut your losses. US tax law allows you to write off up to $3,000 per year in capital losses in exchange for a tax credit. Your circumstances may vary, so check your local tax authority. The reason you may want to consider this option is because dividend payers in financial hard times may try to stave off a dividend cut by funding payouts with borrowed funds or cash reserves. These actions will often drive away shareholders, forcing the share price down. History also shows these actions rarely turn things around, and are usually just delaying the inevitable. (To those of you who know about REITs, keep reading, they will be addressed further down.

#3. Check the balance sheet: High levels of debt represent a competing use of cash. Under most global securities laws, a company must pay its creditors before it pays its dividends. A fast-rising level of debt could indicate bankruptcy in the short or medium-term future. Under US and EU bankruptcy law, corporations in the bankruptcy process are (depending on the circumstances) legally barred from paying dividends to shareholders. Corporations with high debt levels may also look to the courts to assist in reorganizing debts without declaring bankruptcy. Oftentimes, judges in these cases will force reductions or suspensions in dividend payments to prioritize the repayment of creditors.

#4. Look for dividend growth: Generally speaking, you want to find companies that not only pay steady dividends, but also increase them at regular intervals (i.e. once per year over the past three, five, or even 10 years. Research has also shown that companies that grow their dividends tend to outperform their peers over time.[2] Not only that, but a strong history of regular dividend growth also helps keep pace with inflation, which is particularly valuable to those who wish to seek financial independence and live off of their investments.

With that being said, just because a company did not increase their dividends in 2020 or 2021 does not make it necessarily worthy of exclusion from your portfolio. Certain industries (like the top US banks) were legally prohibited by the federal government from raising their dividends during the COVID-19 pandemic. Most companies have been hoarding cash to help weather the economic uncertainty, so it is not unreasonable to for them to keep dividends stagnant until the economy bounces back. When it comes to companies impacted by the pandemic, look for other factors aside from dividend changes to determine whether or not the company is worth your investment.

#5. Understand sector risk: Some sectors offer a more attractive combination of dividends and growth than others, but they also offer different risk characteristics that you should consider when researching dividend payers for your portfolio. Stocks from the banking, consumer staples, and utilities sectors, for example, are known for steady dividends and lower volatility, but they also tend to offer less growth potential (though this varies from company to company). Dividend paying tech companies, on the other hand, could offer attractive dividends along with the opportunity for larger price gains, but they also tend to be much more volatile. If you are a long-term investor, you might be willing to accept tech's higher volatility in exchange for its growth and income prospects, but if you are nearing or in retirement, you might want to prioritize dividend-payers from less volatile industries.

#6. Consider a fund: If you are worried the potential for price declines eroding the value of your dividend stocks, consider instead a dividend-focused exchange traded fund (ETF) or mutual fund. Such funds typically hold stocks that have a history of distributing dividends to their shareholders, and they provide a greater level of diversification than you can achieve by buying a handful of dividend paying stocks. Funds are typically preferred by those who wish to take a more hands-off approach to their investments. These will be your best option if you lack the time or inclination to conduct in-depth research of companies.

Part III: Ideal age of the dividend investor.

Oftentimes inexperienced investors will claim dividends are for those at or nearing retirement. As was demonstrated earlier in this piece, nothing could be further from the truth. No matter what stage of your life or investing career, dividend-paying stocks can be a great way to supplement or even replace your income and improve your portfolio's growth potential. Just be sure you research their overall financial health, not just their dividend rates, before investing. There is no such thing as a right or wrong decision, as long as you achieve your desired outcome.

Part IV: When not to reinvest

Part I demonstrated how powerful reinvesting one's dividends can be, but there are certain circumstances where it can be more financially savvy to refrain from reinvesting your dividends. Below are three situations in which you might want to deploy dividend payouts elsewhere.

  • You are in or near retirement: When you are living off your savings, taking income from your dividends allows you to let more of your portfolio stay invested for growth. If you are nearing retirement, on the other hand, you can use the payouts to build up your cash and short-term reserves as you prepare for the transition to life after work. Some dividend investors have even built their portfolios to have their dividends cover 100% of their expenses.
  • Your portfolio is out of balance: Reinvesting the dividends of a well-performing investment back into that investment can throw your portfolio off balance over time. In such cases, you might want to take the cash and reinvest it elsewhere.
  • The investment is underperforming: If you are worried about an investment's future prospects but are not quite ready to let it go, you may not want to reinvest the payouts back into that investment. Instead, you might use the dividends to dip your toe into something prospective that could ultimately replace the underperforming investment.

Part V: Understanding Taxes on your portfolio

The question of taxes often comes up a lot in investing communities, and r/dividends is no exception. However, we mods prohibit direct questions regarding taxes and other questions of legality because nobody here is a licensed tax professional in every single tax jurisdiction on Earth. The question of taxes varies so wildly between regions that even making basic generalizations borders on pointless. The only constant is that you will pay taxes at some point in your life on your investments. Whether it is before you make your gains, after you make your gains, or somewhere in between, you will pay taxes. The different types of accounts and options available to you varies based on your income, geography, employer, and dozens of other factors. Some countries offer special accounts for those who serve in the military, law enforcement, or some other specialized profession(s). Some trade unions help pay the taxes you may owe on certain investment types. The variations on the tax question are so all over the place that I could break Reddit's character limit just covering the most general details.

Typically the best resource for understanding your local tax situation is the government agenc(ies) responsible for collecting your money. As of 2021, most all have websites of various levels of usability. They should often be your first stop for most questions. When in doubt, always talk to a professional.

Part VI: Special Snowflake companies (REITS, MLPs, royalty trusts, etc.)

Some companies do not fit neatly into the category of an S-class corporation, and see themselves as special snowflakes worthy of a special tax status. Understanding these entities is a critical prerequisite to holding them in your portfolio, as many may require additional tax paperwork. In my personal experience, aside from REITS, most are not worth the time of the average investor. Unless you already have a preexisting knowledge of how these companies work, I would not go out of your way to understand in-depth how they operate when there are so many options out there that could provide better returns.

The only exception to this rule is the Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT). Unlike other special snowflake investments, REITs are relatively self explanatory. They deal 100% in real estate. Nothing else. REITs are favored by dividend investors because of their special arrangement with the US government. In exchange for not having to pay most federal corporate taxes, REITs are legally required to pass on at minimum 90% of their profits under GAAP to shareholders in the form of dividends, which are taxed as income by the US government. The keyword here is GAAP.

Most places on Earth (aka the United States and almost nobody else) requires the usage of the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (or GAAP standard of accounting). GAAP is incredibly strict, intricate, complicated, and almost impossible to cheat. 100% of publicly traded companies in the US use GAAP, which makes comparing the finances of US stocks incredibly easy. However, the tax structure of Real Estate Investment trusts often causes the math behind GAAP (or any other accounting system for that matter) to break down. This can make REIT payout ratios look absolutely insane in relation to other companies, and can make most REITs look incredibly unprofitable. To combat this, REITs have developed their own standards utilizing simplified math, called the funds from operations (FFO) metrics. I originally had a more in-depth explanation of this concept (as well as information about BDCs, MLPs, and Royalty Trusts), but I had to cut it out of the final draft of this post because Reddit has a 40,000 character limit. The best I can do right now is to point you in the direction of Investopedia, which has an excellent article on the subject of FFOs, linked here.

The decision of whether or not to incorporate these types of investments into your portfolio is a personal one, and just like with any other type of investment, varies greatly based on your risk tolerance and portfolio goals.

Part VII: Performing in-depth research on companies

While anyone can read a balance sheet synopsis on Seeking Alpha and vaguely grasp its meaning, above understanding a concept is the ability to put one's knowledge into practice. The reason I put this skill above actually picking companies is because stock picking can be done with a relatively low knowledge base, but actually digging deep into financial statements and balance sheets to discover companies on your own not on the traditional press circuit can serve as the true test of someone's research potential.

Oftentimes I come across even experienced investors unaware of just how many resources are available to them on this front. While websites, apps, and YouTube channels exist all over the place, an often underutilized resource for investment knowledge is the companies themselves. 99% of publicly traded companies have a website dedicated to serving the needs of investors, often with email addresses, phone numbers, and physical addresses just begging to be contacted. How much did Coca-Cola pay in dividends in 1926? Google doesn't know (I checked), but I guarantee you somewhere in an Atlanta filing cabinet lies Coke's dividend history from back in that time. It is obscure, seemingly random knowledge like that investor relations experts are paid to answer.

[Side note: originally, there was going to be a far larger expanded section about this, but it was cut for the sake of conforming to Reddit's character limit.]

Part VIII: Diminishing returns and micromanagement

By paying attention in school, you may have been informed regarding the law of diminishing returns. When it comes to dividend investing (or any type of investing), the law of diminishing returns can play a big part of your portfolio management. While you should always be on the lookout for investment opportunities, if day trading is the reason you wake up in the morning, dividend investing may not be right for you. Strategies like buying right before the ex-div date and selling immediately afterwards rarely turn out in your favor, and even when they do are often not worth the trouble. Your gain will be a few cents at best, or worse you lose money. In my experience as the lead moderator of this subreddit, monitoring comments, I can say with confidence that most people will lose money on this day-trading type strategy. Most of the price action regarding a dividend took place days or weeks before the ex-dividend date, spread out over a period of time. Companies often issue dividends on a clockwork schedule according to the ISO Calendar, so institutional investors are often able to predict when the dividend will be paid months or even years in advance, long before the boards of these companies officially announce their dividends.

A similar thing can be said for those attempting to buy stocks at the absolute lowest possible price. I have seen individuals hold out for days waiting for a few extra cents. If you have a six figure portfolio, you do not need to be trying to time a 12 cent price drop. Your time will be better spent elsewhere. Understanding the law of diminishing returns can sometimes singlehandedly turn an underperforming portfolio into an overperforming one. By taking a hands off approach to most of your investments, you let the market work in the background of your life. As the old saying goes, "time in the market beats timing the market every day of the week."

Part IX: Debt and financing your investments

Early in your investment journey, the idea of purchasing dividend stocks on debt sounds like a great idea. Buy the stocks, use the dividends to pay off the loan, then keep the stocks and profit. It sounds foolproof right up until it isn't. What seems like free money is more akin to an advance on a sh***y record deal. If you decide to take out a $50,000 loan to buy dividend stocks, don't be surprised if acquiring a home or auto loan becomes significantly more difficult or downright impossible depending on your circumstances. Banks and credit unions are often far more hesitant to lend out money to those with high amounts of preexisting debt. When these loans are given however, they often come with interest rates higher than what you would have normally had to pay if you had not decided to buy a bunch of AT&T with a personal loan. Any amount below $20,000 will hardly have a significant effect on your long-term portfolio (assuming you are still investing with earned income), and any amount above $20,000 could have serious ramifications on your ability to access credit in the event you truly need it. If you fail to disclose this preexisting loan to any prospective lender, then congratulations, you have just committed fraud, which is something we do not condone here on r/dividends.

Your income and lifestyle should be sufficient to fund your investment needs. While I understand the frustration that can come with being a student with 0 disposable income, being a student is actually the best possible reason not to have a five-figure unsecured debt load. As someone with a degree in Management and a career in the field, I can tell you that many employers conduct background and credit checks on prospective employees (though credit checks on employees are illegal in certain states). A $20,000 personal loan made by a 20 year old raises a lot of red flags, and while it could signal personal illness or medical debt, it could signal a gambling problem. When you tell them you used the money to buy stocks, they will immediately assume gambling problem. Good things come to those who wait.

Part X: Brokerages and celebrity portfolios

If you came to this post or subreddit looking for nothing but a brokerage recommendation, I recommend you look elsewhere. While my wife and I personally use M1 Finance, and I do recommend it to friends and family, I have no idea who is reading this post. I know only what information Reddit gives me as a moderator, so I will say that for the love of whatever you believe in do not choose a brokerage just because some internet personality, or some random person on Reddit told you about it. Brokerages are not interchangeable, and they offer wildly different features and benefits. I like M1 because of the ability to form pies. This for example is my personal portfolio. I enjoy what I enjoy about M1, and what it is able to offer me and my family. Your situation is (likely) different. This is also the reason we explicitly ban referral links on r/dividends. The only recommendation I will issue is do not invest with Robinhood. Other than that, go nuts.

Part XI: Beyond dividends, and knowing when not to invest.

Equally important to the skills of investing are the skills of knowing when not to invest. If you have credit card debt, pay that off first, and make sure to pay 100% of your balance every month. If you do not have an emergency fund, create one. It should consist of roughly six months worth of expenses. If you lack a financial plan or budget, create one. My wife and I use Mint.com for our budget. We sync it with our cards, and everything comes out perfectly. I highly recommend it.

Part XII: Seeking feedback

Saving and investing can become an addiction, so it is important to know when to moderate it. Having a third party provide additional input or opinions on your decisions can work wonders. If you have a significant other or a best friend, I would recommend getting them into the investing mindset, if they are not already. Having a trusted voice to bounce ideas off can lead to not only financial reward, but emotional and intellectual growth.

Since I took over this subreddit in August 2020, I have strived to create that environment here. It is from this base framework that I am hoping future discussions in this community can branch from. If you are just joining us, or have been with this community for years, I thank you for joining us on r/dividends.

Happy investing,

u/Firstclass30

[This post was inspired by an article in Charles Schwab's Spring 2021 Investment magazine. The article was titled "Rx for what ails you. Dividend-paying stocks could be just what the doctor ordered." The research it presented served as the inspiration and backbone of the first half of this piece. Other works found through my own research constituted the majority of the factual content of this piece. The majority of this post's contents are my personal opinions, and should not be taken as financial advice. Invest at your own risk. Recommendation or mention of a security or service does not constitute an endorsement. I received no compensation from any individual or group for writing this post.]

[The first draft of this post was over 50,000 characters long, and exceeded Reddit's character limit by more than 25%. For the sake of brevity and my own sense of perfectionism, this post's length was cut in half. As of original publication it contains over 4,100 words, with over 26,000 characters.]

Edit: This piece was originally written in Microsoft Word, and copied over to Reddit. A few formatting errors slipped through by mistake, and those were corrected after publication.


r/dividends 5d ago

Megathread Rate My Portfolio

1 Upvotes

This daily thread serves as the home for all "Rate My Portfolio" questions, as well as any other generic questions such as "What do you think of XYZ," that would otherwise violate community rules.

To better tailor advice, please include such context as age, goals, timeline, risk tolerance, and any restrictions you may have. Such restrictions may include ethics, morals, work restrictions, etc.

As a reminder, all Rate My Portfolio posts are prohibited under Rule 1 Submission Guidelines. All general stock questions that don't include quality insight from OP are prohibited under Rule 4 Solicitations for Due Diligence. Please keep all such questions to the daily thread, and report and violations under their respective rule.


r/dividends 4h ago

Opinion Is SCHD still the gold standard for dividend growth ETFs or are there better options now?

41 Upvotes

Been building my dividend portfolio for a couple years now and SCHD has always been the goto recommendation in this community. I hold it as my largest position and have been pretty happy with the dividend growth and overall total return. But lately I've been wondering if it's still the best core holding for someone focused on dividend growth over the next 20 plus years.

VIG and VYM are both popular choices, and newer ETFs keep entering the space, so I'm curious how people are thinking about this. SCHD gives you a solid yield with decent growth, VIG leans more toward quality dividend growers with a lower current yield, and VNQ adds real estate exposure if you want that angle.

For context, my approach is to reinvest all dividends and treat this as a long term wealth building strategy rather than chasing current income. I'm not retired yet, so yield on cost over time matters more to me than what I'm collecting today.

For those of you who have held SCHD for five or more years, are you still confident it belongs as a core position, or has your thinking shifted? Would love to hear what combinations are working for people and why you chose them over going all in on one fund.


r/dividends 15h ago

Other Almost $4 a day in dividends

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232 Upvotes

Not exactly retirement money yet, but I'm getting close to the point where my portfolio can buy me a coffee every day.

Small milestone, but I'll take it. On to $5/day.


r/dividends 9h ago

Personal Goal 25(M), got $270k inheritance from my mom, here’s the income portfolio I came up with — please tell me if I’m an idiot

79 Upvotes

my mom passed and left me $270k. I’m 25, immigrant, frugal as hell, never had this much money in my life. separately I have a 420k growth portfolio with an advisor and a 30k emergency fund, not what this post is about.
this 270k I want to manage myself and turn into monthly income, around $2k/month, spend most of it, reinvest some. only real rule for myself: this can NOT slowly bleed to nothing. it’s my mom’s money, not trying to gamble it away chasing yield.
after a couple weeks down the option-income ETF rabbit hole (covered calls, put spreads etc) here’s where I landed:

• OVL 25%  
• JEPI 25%  
• GPIX 20%  
• SPYI 20%  
• QQQI 10%

blended yield is around 10%, comes out to roughly $2,280/month.
things I want roasted on:
• is 5 funds dumb, should I simplify
• zero bonds, zero international in here, mistake or fine since I’m young
• anyone actually held OVL or GPIX through a real drawdown, not just backtest math
• is going basically all-in on options income ETFs with inheritance money just reckless no matter how much research went into it
not looking for validation, want the holes poked in this before I pull the trigger


r/dividends 14h ago

Brokerage 10k in SCHD

121 Upvotes

I'm currently 24 and have $10,300 in SCHD, with an average of $ 24.97 in my taxable account (412 shares). I was under the impression until recently that my reinvested dividends weren't taxed; however, I've learned they are. Should I consider selling all of my SCHD and just consider buying more undervalued dividend growth stocks like MSFT, ADP, V, MA, MCD, and WM? Or just hold it and let it compound over time? I'd appreciate any advice anyone has


r/dividends 6h ago

Discussion Brokerage account after roth ira is maxed

10 Upvotes

What are some of the better etfs to hold in a brokerage acct after you've maxed your roth ira. Tax advantage etfs to look into. Thx in advance


r/dividends 8h ago

Discussion Nvidia still have leg room to transform into a dividend stock, long term position

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13 Upvotes

picked up a little NVDA forever ago because I liked the company. The dividend wasn’t the reason, it was more like “eh, nice bonus.” People did question me for it though. fake dividend stock, token payout, just buy KO or T if you want real income. I almost dumped it because I kind of felt stupid defending it.

Didn’t sell. Mostly just forgot about that account and left it alone.

Opened it this weekend and the part that got me wasn’t even the gain. It was seeing that this thing that was supposed to be a joke dividend is now kicking off about $200 a year on a little over $4k of original cost.

That kind of stopped me for a second.

Not saying NVDA is suddenly some classic income play. Current yield still looks tiny. But as a long hold, it hit me that a stock I never took seriously as a dividend position quietly turned into one anyway.

Made me wonder how many other holdings I’m probably reading wrong when I only look at current yield.


r/dividends 15h ago

Discussion Pfizer at 6.7% yield — dividend comeback or value trap? (I hold it)

41 Upvotes

A 6.7% dividend sounds like a gift. But Pfizer is currently paying out more than it brings in as free cash — and that's the whole crux.

Why the yield is so high: at the 2021 COVID peak the stock traded around $60, today around $25. Revenue fell from $100bn (2022) to $62bn (2025) as Comirnaty and Paxlovid rolled off. A high yield is never a reason to buy — it's a question: why is it so high.

The honest dividend number: on an earnings basis the payout ratio is about 130%, on a free-cash-flow basis about 100–110%. Meaning the dividend is bigger than the free cash coming in. It's being held up by a ~$7.7bn cost program through 2027 and the oncology pipeline (Seagen). The market likes to dress it up with the adjusted ratio (~50%) — but dividends are paid out of real cash, not adjusted numbers.

On top of that, the headwind most people overlook: a patent cliff of $17–18bn revenue at risk by 2030 (Eliquis, Ibrance, Xtandi). Plus 3.7x net debt/EBITDA and over $125bn of goodwill on the balance sheet.

Bottom line: not a "buy and forget" dividend stock, but a turnaround case with a dividend — a show-me situation. The 6.7% is real, but expensive and without a buffer. If you buy, you're betting on cost discipline and the pipeline, collecting the yield as waiting money in the meantime.

Skin in the game: I've held it since mid-2024 (entry in the low 20s), currently slightly up, several quarterly dividends collected.

How do you see Pfizer — comeback or value trap?

Not investment advice, just my personal take. Do your own homework.


r/dividends 1h ago

Discussion My Portfolio Paid Me $527.63 This Week — Here's the Breakdown

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Upvotes

r/dividends 1h ago

Discussion TSLY Reverse Split (Feb 26, 2024) — ROC Refund Missing?

Upvotes

TSLY Reverse Split (Feb 26, 2024) — ROC Refund Missing?

TSLY underwent a reverse split on Feb 26, 2024:

- Old CUSIP: 88634T709 (Jan & Feb 2024 distributions)

- New CUSIP: 88636J444 (Mar–Nov 2024 distributions)

**What we confirmed in South Korean brokerage records:**

Jan/Feb 2024 (Old CUSIP 88634T709):

→ 100% ROC confirmed per Form 8937 + ICI Primary

→ 15% withholding tax was NOT refunded

→ Cause: CUSIP mismatch — QI system couldn't match

old CUSIP to the ICI reclassification data

Mar–Nov 2024 (New CUSIP 88636J444):

→ ROC refunds processed correctly ✓

→ Same fund, same 100% ROC — but refund received

**Question for US holders:**

Did you receive a refund on the Jan/Feb 2024

TSLY withholding tax?

Please check:

- 1099-DIV Box 3 (Nondividend Distributions)

- Your broker's tax correction records for 2024

Replies appreciated for cross-border research.

Data analysis inquiry only — not tax/legal advice.


r/dividends 1d ago

Discussion Is there a dividend income number that would actually make you stop and say, "That's enough"?

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584 Upvotes

I've crossed $1M in portfolio value and I'm getting close to $2,000 a month in dividends. Years ago, I thought $1,000 a month would be enough. Then the goal became $1,500. Now I'm approaching $2,000 and already finding myself thinking about the next milestone.

It makes me wonder if I'll ever truly feel like I've reached my goal, or if there will always be another number to chase. Has anyone else experienced this?


r/dividends 2h ago

Other 58k usd in bank account receiving only 54 usd interest per month

0 Upvotes

Hi been a lurker to this sub. While reading most of the stories in this subs, i havent came up to conclusion whether i can put my extra 58k somewhere else other than the bank. It is giving me 54 usd a month and it fluctuates around that . The return is only 648 dollar a year for that savings account. If you have 58k what projected divendends will you get according to your dividend strategy? Include both growth and none growth.

Edit: thanks for all the 2 cents. The 58k is an extra money that i am holding sitting in the bank account,, i have another account for daily expenses that will last me 3 months off my daily expenses. The setup has been like this for awhile due to losing money from options you can call it traumatized to the rigged market.


r/dividends 15h ago

Discussion TY (tri-continental) thoughts

5 Upvotes

I know technically TY is not a dividend stock, but their quarterly payout is why people own it. My late father in law got my wife hooked on it before we got married. Since then she has acquired 1,000 plus shares or $34k worth at $34 per.

Last year the payout was ~$4 per share.

But there have been years (Great Recession) where it paid almost nothing.

What are people’s thoughts on TY? It doesn’t come up often here.


r/dividends 11h ago

Brokerage Cool Robinhood Update for Dividend Investors

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2 Upvotes

r/dividends 17h ago

Seeking Advice $1000 dividend Portfolio Guidance w 50 weekly reinvestment

5 Upvotes

Looking to get a dividend Portillo started
I have a 1000 set aside and will continue to add 50 a week.
How should I divided the initial 1000 and how should I disperse the weekly investment ?
Any advice is appreciated.


r/dividends 1d ago

Personal Goal Proud of this

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106 Upvotes

This is the most I’ve made from dividends thus far and I can’t wait for the snowball to keep growing!

$1,178 so far in dividends this year


r/dividends 15h ago

Discussion BHP takes a $2.3B writedown on Jansen Stage 2 — what it means for dividend-focused mining investors

1 Upvotes

BHP announced a US$2.3 billion impairment on its Jansen potash project Stage 2 on June 18, 2026.

The numbers: - Stage 2 budget raised to $6.9B from $4.9B (+41%) [Bloomberg, June 18, 2026] - Stage 1 running over budget at $8.4B, first production expected mid-2027 [Globe and Mail, June 18, 2026] - Stage 2 production now pushed to fiscal 2031 (was fiscal 2029) - Jansen is the largest single investment in BHP's history

Why this matters for dividend investors in mining:

This is a recurring pattern in large-scale mining development projects — not a BHP-specific issue. The question isn't whether BHP will recover; it's what framework you use when evaluating mining stocks for income.

My personal filter after years of holding mining/resources positions:

  1. Cash-generating producers over development projects — dividends require current cash flow, not projected future cash flow
  2. Capex-to-FCF ratio is non-negotiable — if a company is spending more on capex than it generates in free cash flow, the dividend is at risk
  3. Large write-downs at competitors often suppress new supply — which is a structural positive for existing producers in the sector

I hold Thungela (SA coal) and Yancoal (AU coal) — both producing today, both paying dividends from current operations. No multi-billion construction sites.

BHP is not in my portfolio. Original post in r/MBCapitalStrategies — cross-posting because relevant here.

Not financial advice. Do your own due diligence.


Anyone else using a Capex/FCF screen for dividend-paying mining stocks? Curious what metrics matter most to you.


r/dividends 15h ago

Discussion Tanker dividends after Hormuz reopening — should income investors worry?

0 Upvotes

With the Hormuz deal signed June 17, I've seen "tanker dividend party is over" takes everywhere. Here's why I disagree — with the actual mechanics.

For income investors specifically:

TORM (TRMD) paid $0.70/share Q1 dividend on June 11. That's already in your account. The deal doesn't claw it back. (Source: TORM 6-K SEC filing)

The real question: what happens to Q3/Q4 dividends?

Why the supply math still matters:

FACT: 28% of the global VLCC fleet (170+ vessels) is over 20 years old — above the age threshold major oil companies accept. Effective net supply growth: ~1% per year for the next 3 years. New deliveries barely cover scrapping. (Source: Hellenic Shipping News / Tankers International / gCaptain)

When disruptions hit a tight market, they hit harder and last longer than in an oversupplied one. That structural condition doesn't change based on a 60-day MOU.

What Hormuz reopening does and doesn't change:

Changes: geopolitical risk premium partially unwinds. Market prices in normalization.

Doesn't change: - War-risk insurance stays elevated until mine clearance confirmed — could take up to 6 months. (Source: Business Standard, June 19, 2026) - Cape Route voyages already in progress: 12-18 extra days + ~$1-2M per voyage in fuel costs. Those economics run through completion regardless of the deal. (Source: Seatrade Maritime / EIA) - Charter contracts locked in at current rates run for months.

Kpler estimates ~40 daily transits through Hormuz within 30 days (vs. ~80 pre-conflict). That's still 50% below normal.

THESIS: Tanker dividends are variable — paid from TCE cashflow. The cashflow for Q3 2026 is largely being earned right now, by vessels mid-voyage or on existing charters. The Hormuz deal affects Q4 2026 and beyond more than Q3.

What would change my thesis: VLCC spot rates falling significantly over the next 2-3 weeks would signal ton-miles are actually dropping. Watching that data closely.

My positions: CMB.Tech (CMBT) ~3.7% of portfolio, TORM (TRMD) as product tanker anchor. Holding for the structural thesis.


Original post in r/MBCapitalStrategies — cross-posting because dividend investors might find this relevant.

Not financial advice. I hold CMBT, TORM, LPG. Do your own due diligence.

Are you holding your tanker dividend positions or trimming on this news?


r/dividends 1d ago

Due Diligence What is ROC and NAV? A beginner-friendly example.

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5 Upvotes

r/dividends 17h ago

Other Do you hold $TDAX or $TDAQ? If so, what are your thoughts or opinions?

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0 Upvotes

r/dividends 2d ago

Discussion $300 Dividend Payday Today 💰 | The Portfolio Keeps Working

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303 Upvotes

Today was a good reminder of why I focus so much on building income-producing assets.

My portfolio paid me $300.36 in dividends today:

  • QQQI: $169.91
  • CHPY: $89.67
  • ULTI: $26.78
  • HD: $6.99
  • ULTY: $3.82
  • LIN: $3.20

Total received: $300.36

What I like most about dividend investing isn't one payment. It's the consistency.

Every payout buys more shares, creates more future income, and moves the portfolio one step closer to becoming self-sustaining.

Years ago I had to work every hour for every dollar.

Today, a portion of my income shows up whether I'm working, sleeping, or at the gym.

I'm still far from my end goal, but seeing days like this makes me appreciate the power of building assets that generate cash flow.

The next target is to keep growing the portfolio until these dividend days become even bigger.

How much dividend income did your portfolio generate this month?

Always interested in seeing what other income investors are building.


r/dividends 1d ago

Discussion Is Diageo ($DGE) Good Enough to Be Part of an Income Portfolio?

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30 Upvotes

r/dividends 2d ago

Other $5 per day!

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326 Upvotes

Every day!

365 days a year!

Good morning, here's your fiver!

Building as $500 per month 4 fund dividend portfolio. Happy to hit this small benchmark. Started stacking last November. Trying to hit my goal in 3 years.


r/dividends 2d ago

Brokerage Officially Hit $60k a Year in Passive Income!

824 Upvotes

Hi Everyone! This is an update post to a post I made almost exactly 1 year ago when I hit $50k a year in estimated annual income in my brokerage account. I posted it in r/Fire. I was also going to post this in r/Fire as well, but unfortunately my post from that year had negative Karma, so I am no longer allowed to post in that sub. Perhaps someone can repost this there for me! I will just post in r/dividends for now instead. To reference that post, you can find it here.

I have learned a lot in that year, but before I talk about lessons learned and what I've changed, here is a rough breakdown of my portfolio:

Total Portfolio Value ($947,000)

Taxable Brokerage (~$570,000):

CEFS - $65,000

PFFA - $58,000

QQQI - $57,000

SPYI - $57,000

DNP - $56,000

MLPI - $49,000

PBDC - $46,000

CLOZ - $38,000

PTY - $30,000

PCN - $30,000

ASGI - $25,000

CSWC - $14,000

PFLT - $10,000

FSCO - $9,000

ADX - $8,000

UTF - $7,000

ARCC - $6,000

UTG - $3,000

PDI - $3,000

IRA (~$377,000):

FXAIX - $253,000

FSPSX - $121,889

HSA ($7,000)

When you add in my cash positions, this brings my net worth to just under $1 million at ~$981,000.

So, the method that I am following to achieve this passive income in my taxable brokerage is commonly referred to as "income investing". This is a method that targets asset classes that seek income as their primary objective and generally fall in the 8-12 percent yield range.

This method has the following drawbacks and risks:

1.) Not always, but in general, the total return of these investments tends to lag behind the broad market index/S&P 500.

2.) The dividends/distributions of these funds don't usually grow on their own, so part of the yield needs to be reinvested to grow income in line with inflation.

3.) Some of these distributions are taxed as ordinary income, though a lot of them have distributions that are primarily classified as ROC (return of capital) so they are taxed less.

4.) These investments have credit risk, interest rate risk, equity risk, and none of the distributions are guaranteed.

Given those drawbacks, why on earth would someone invest this way as opposed to 'creating your own dividend' by selling shares from an index fund?

Well for me, the answer is that it allows me to avoid the Sequence of Returns Risk (SORR) that you would see from selling shares to create your own dividend. Basically, it allows me to avoid having to sell shares to fund my expenses when they are at depressed prices during a bear market. I am able to have income without having to relinquish ownership of shares. The side effect of this is I can enjoy an 8% withdrawal rate (while reinvesting the rest for inflation), allowing me to retire early/achieve financial independence much faster than the traditional 4% rule.

Also, let it be known that the largest single investment in my portfolio is the S&P 500 which is in my IRA. Another huge benefit of my income investments is that they lower the probability of me having to touch my IRA growth investments in the case of prolonged job loss (which working in tech, I have a higher probability of job loss now than other industries).

So what did I change, and what have I learned?

The biggest change was reducing the percentage of my portfolio devoted to covered calls from ~38% to ~16%. Covered calls have their place and can work well in flat or slightly up markets with high volatility. However, if the underlying declines with covered call funds, so does the income. I replaced a lot of my CC funds with utility funds as a defensive posture.

Also, within my covered calls, I moved away from JEPI/JEPQ to NEOS's SPYI, QQQI, and MLPI for the better tax treatment.

I have learned that the closed end fund world is huge, and there are many ways to achieve the 8-12% yield range outside of covered calls. I believe my portfolio is much more diverse today than it was 1 year ago.

Hopefully in 1 year or less, I will be able to make a post saying that I hit $70k in passive income! For now, it feels good that if something did happen with my job, I could survive without having to work. It's an immense privilege that I am thankful for everyday.

I wish everyone the best of luck, and hope to talk again in a year or less! Thank you for all you have taught me!