My Top Dividend Strategy Delivered A 161% Return ; Here’s How It Works
2022.04.12 12:55
Beware of Wall Street “wisdom” now more than ever. Especially when it comes to the most commonly quoted maxim for retirement: it’s based on a rule that was never designed for times like these!
I’m talking about the so-called “4% rule,” which says you should sell 4% of your nest egg every year in retirement.
Sounds simple, right?
Trouble is, it slashes your income stream and caps your upside in one go! It’s especially dangerous advice to follow in a downturn like the one that’s hit us in the last few months.
Let’s say, for example, you own $200,000 worth of Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:CSCO) shares. The company is one of the most reliable dividend payers in the tech space, hiking its payout for years and continuously growing it (though not spectacularly: Cisco’s annual hikes usually only come in at just one or two cents a share).
Your holding would pay $1.52 per share in dividends on an annualized basis, for a 2.8% yield, based on today’s share price. Let’s also say you were slated to sell 4% of your holding—or $8,000 worth—on Dec. 29, 2021, just before year end, when the stock hit an all-time high of $63.53. To get your $8K back then, you’d have had to sell 126 shares.
With 126 shares gone from your account, your yearly dividend income drops by $192. Plus, you’ve got 126 shares to appreciate in the future. It’s the worst of both worlds!
That’s bad enough, but it gets worse when these sells fall in the depths of a pullback. Imagine what would happen if you had to sell on Apr. 5, 2022, just a few days ago:
The Worst Kind Of Market Timing
CSCO-2022 Price-Chart
Cisco’s dividend is still fine, but the stock cratered 15% from its Dec. 29 high. So now you’d now have to unload more shares (149, to be exact) to get your $8K.
That puts an even harder cap on your future gains and slices your yearly income even more: by $226. Get hit by a few pullbacks like that and you’re well on your way to running out of money in retirement!
And you and I both know that crashes like these are far from uncommon. Take a look at the header Cisco took in during the March 2020 crash:
You Do Want To Be Caught Selling Into This
CSCO-March 2020 Chart
Your Return: From Sketchy To Serene
Luckily, there’s a better way than Wall Street’s flawed 4% approach. It involves moving more of our return from wild stock charts like Cisco’s and toward a huge cash stream that holds up through a crisis.
Swap This Wild Ride…
CSCO-Volatile Chart
…For a Smooth Cash Stream Like This
OKE-Steady Dividend
That smooth payout stream is what members of my service have collected since we bought pipeline operator ONEOK (NYSE:OKE) in April of 2020, right in the middle of the COVID collapse.
That was no easy feat from an emotional perspective, but investors who went with their gut and took the plunge locked in an 11.8% dividend at the time (because dividend yields rise as share prices fall, and OKE was a bargain thanks to overblown fears of a pandemic-driven depression).
With a yield like that, you can forget about the 4% rule! On a $200K stake, your dividends would amount to $23,600 a year. That’s in dividends coming your portfolio annually, which you can use to pay your bills or reinvest, perhaps through a dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP).
That’s a particularly savvy move because buying a fixed amount through a DRIP lets you buy more shares when they’re cheap (like during a crash, for example) and fewer when they’re pricey.
Think about that for a second: it’s the reverse of the flawed 4% rule—and it’s a proven way to build wealth over the long haul.
And we haven’t even talked about price gains yet: members who bought on my recommendation did quite well indeed, whether they DRIPed in following their initial buy or not: the stock has soared 117% since our buy call, for a 161% total return, including dividends!
OKE’s Price—And Total Return—Soar
OKE-Total Returns
That gain has whittled OKE’s dividend yield down to a still-decent 5.3%, and with the oil shortage showing no signs of abating, its payout looks solid.
Disclosure: