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The choice is yours . . . You
can pocket your dividend payments or plow them back into shares of a
company through its Dividend Reinvestment Plan (DRIP). If you choose to
let your dividends grow drip by drip, then over time you'll be amazed at
how much wealth you can build for yourself. Money doesn't grow on trees,
but it sure does grow in a Dividend Reinvestment Plan. It's easy to see how compounding builds wealth over time. Think about your bank savings account. Say you earn 4% interest on an account balance of $10,000. At the end of the first year, you'll have $10,400 in that account. If you earn another 4% interest on that amount the following year, you'll then have $10,816. In 15 years, you would have accumulated $18,009, increasing your investment by more than +80% -- for doing absolutely nothing!
DRIP plans work exactly the same way. In fact, they're even better than savings accounts because the yields you can earn are usually much higher. For example, one of my current portfolio holdings -- American Capital Strategies (ACAS) -- is now yielding about 9% based on a projected dividend payment of $3.20 this year. Let's assume you own 1,000 shares of ACAS and that you purchased those shares at an average price of $35 per share. By simply reinvesting your dividend in the company's DRIP plan, in 15 years you would own 3,642 shares. Assuming the firm's share price stays the same, your original $35,000 investment in ACAS would now be worth $127,487! Better yet, you'd be earning nearly $11,500 in annual dividend income from that one investment alone. And this example assumes the firm's share price doesn't budge an inch over the entire 15-year period. Those projected gains are from dividends only. However, let's now assume that shares of ACAS appreciate at the slow and steady pace of +5% a year over the next 15 years. That's a safe assumption since, in fact, the shares have gained an average of +23% every year since September 1997. If you didn't reinvest your dividends, then you'd end up with $144,134 at the end of 15 years. That's nice, but you'd do even better if you let your dividends compound. By enrolling your shares in a DRIP plan, you'd end up with 3,642 shares worth $265,036 -- considerably more than your original $35,000 investment!
The point is that dividends
matter. And reinvesting dividends paid by high-yield securities matters
even more. Dividend reinvestment is one of the safest, surest ways to
build wealth in your income portfolio. Important Note: Throughout the remainder of this article, editor Carla Pasternak provides an analysis of eight high-yielding income stocks with dividend yields of around 6-7% that also offer dividend reinvestment plans (DRIPs) to their shareholders. However, in order to view the remainder of this article, you'll need to subscribe to our premium income-oriented newsletter -- High-Yield Investing. After you subscribe you'll receive immediate access to the remainder of this article, as well as our monthly High-Yield Investing newsletter and a host of additional premium content. Please visit one of the following links to continue . . . Good investing!
Carla Pasternak draws on a variety of financial backgrounds to make profitable calls on income-generating stocks for her readers. Carla has been employed in the investment industry for more than two decades. In addition to her work as a writer for several other nationally recognized financial publishers, her previous experience includes a position as President of a well-respected investor relations firm. She has also been writing shareholder reports for public companies (annual reports, speeches, corporate profiles, slide shows, etc.) since 1980. A highly successful investment analyst, Carla specializes in high-yield, income-paying stocks. In that pursuit, she's always mindful to select companies that not only pay rich dividends, but that also have the potential to deliver strong long-term capital gains. On the
educational front, Carla holds both MBA and Ph.D. degrees. When she's
not watching the market, she's teaching business courses at the college
level and managing several million dollars in portfolio assets.
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