I believe value dividend investing has proven to be one of the most effect forms of investing as it allows you to buy quality companies at great prices while receiving cash flow, without selling your position in a stock. On this channel, we focus on finding great value dividend paying companies by finding their intrinsic value, creating stock portfolio trackers, tracking my real dividend portfolio each month, and most importantly, finding ways to live off dividend income!
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I am not a Financial advisor or licensed professional. Nothing I say or produce on RU-vid, or anywhere else, should be considered as advice. All content is for educational purposes only. I am not responsible for any financial losses or gains. Invest and trade at your own risk.
Amazing breakdown and so motivating for us fellow smaller investors! I have no doubt you will be living off these dividends sooner than the 14 year projection :)
Awesome video, loved the deep dive! You’ve really got me thinking about microcap stocks. I came across $WKSP (Worksport) while browsing Discord and Reddit, and it's got a lot of buzz. They’re working on some innovative solar tech for vehicles, which sounds like a game-changer. Definitely considering investing after seeing so many positive discussions online. Keep up the great content!
Sorry; Not sorry, the minimum neccessary to live a dividend funded COMFORTABLE (Key word, here), is around 6-7 million, adjusted for both inflation (must re-invest at least a % of your gains +-%15-%30), to account for both inflation, and the larger burden of health care costs getting old...With, around 8 million in consistant dividend payments, collected annually. A good "rule of thumb", being a comfortable 200-250K, before/after taxes...That is to live COMFORTABALLY; A main residence, with a modest size boat or some type of vacation property. One must remember that health care will make up a large portion of spending, becoming more evident as you age. The reality is that less than %5 of investors actually reach their goal; With more important spending often getti g in the way...EX: Getting married automatically cuts your odds by %50; Since %50+ end in divorce. You better bet your last $, your ex will want "their share", of as much of that $ their atty says they deserve; Which, you will also almost assuredly pay for...If you want children...Yeah...Say "bye bye", to any discretionary spending...8 million is right around the figure to navigate these "incidentals"...Around 4 million if you plan to always remain single, and keep a tight budget...For a dividend investor, the day you stop re-investing some gains, is the day your accts start depreciating through inflation...Still a very solid plan to build a nest egg for an enjoyable retirement, though...
What is the difference between Total Debt and Total Liabilities for a company? And why are we using Total Debt in the DCF? Take Monster Energy for example. Total Debt is 29M Yet Total Debt is 1.2B. Huge gap. Why is this? BTW love the videos
Considering I have about 200 shares at average of 28 . Should we be selling and locking profits and Buy again when they are down ? Or just keep earning dividends and loose profits ? The kind of profits we have now would suffice for 2 years worth of dividends . Any suggestions on what you guys do ?
@@Dividendology Of course he understands it but he doesn't use it, as Charlie Munger has said... ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-QErnZL4iFjk.html
We now start to slowly start to see the impact of higher interest rates. Starbucks will suffer at a minimum of the next 2 quarters in USA alone China also suffers massive from economic troubles. I would wait at least 2 quarters if not more because the stock price will more likely go down in the short term than up.
I was a buyer at 74, or lower… but it the sudden surge is pure speculation. I don’t want to buy now, for a better prospect in the future. I agree that things should look better next year, but should not kick up the price now.
Unless you've lost your job or your partner has lost their job, it's 100% your fault if you can't pay your rent or your car bill. Need to live somewhere you can afford and drive something you can afford.
Great list of dividend stocks! Have you considered looking into Actinogen Medical? They've been making significant strides in their Alzheimer's and depression trials with their novel Xanamem drug. Could be an interesting addition for your next video, especially given the potential growth in biotech! Would love to hear your thoughts on it.
SBUX will be forced to cut prices which will hurt margins. Not as much as MCD and others, but still. General growth will be hard to come by. I'll come back in a year or two
Starbucks does not cut prices lmao… they increase them every quarter on a few items by a few cents. It’s not obvious but to loyal guest an increase of .25 is noticeable
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there are some strong performers like ABC Inc., XYZ Co., and a few others known for consistent dividends. But you know, focusing solely on dividends can be risky if you're not diversified
Imagine if a sector suddenly faces a downturn, like tech did last year. If your portfolio heavily leans on dividend stocks from just one sector, your returns could take a nosedive
It's like not putting all your eggs in one basket. By diversifying across sectors and asset classes, you can cushion the impact of any single stock or sector underperforming
That navigation line is wrong. You jave mulitple aourc a of retirements, that should and have to be invested in. Roth ira, iw it taxed. That is a 30 p rcent bonus. For a market meaning if it doea divodena, qll cash no tax.meqning q 30 percent boost. Mraning tax a have q 42.8 percent equalovqnxy in investment. That is right, pqying tqxes, increasew yield by 30 percent.. and if you have just 70 perrcent . Divide 30 by 70. Thats a 42.8 yoeld. But do not disca s aocial security, everybody kno how valuabl it is. What is 2000 dollars equal to a month, in investments, of it grows. That is 800,000 dollar investment, that yields q 3 percent, and grows that you do not jave to re invest in. Thats equal to 800,000 dollqrs of wealth, thus mqzing that out gelps qlso, id not for the present the future. So live off dividens, and mqx out what you can. Roth meqns retire lat r, but not that mich later. Pay more now, for more katwr. Aocial securiry is endorc d by a compqny like 401k. That is double. Ao, if you work and mqx out your ma xhing you should yield doubl, and transfer to q dividen portfolio. Meaning, if you have a 401k you can choose a optimal market, and then transfer to dividen trad. Not all markets are dividens, but it does not mean if you do not save uo, you cannot utilise it. Maybe xhi g souble, by a company will outperform most srocks. 1 perxwnt griwth, means two if it doublea . So a 4-5 pe cwnt safe investment, yields actually 8-10 percent of your oefinak investment. So do not , disregard, opportunites, like company adviser, were you can out i. A little more. The value of wocial sexurity, roth ira, and many more investments groups. You want a retirment wgile running, a small buisness roth, ira. Is necessary. Otherwise your penilised, with huge tax brackets, for that to xtra aource of income. Double down with dividens with no tax, and your set. Every little bit helps.
Not sure if it’s your mic or if you’re too close but the bass is too much and I can’t hear what you’re saying when listening in my car. I even turned the bass all the way down. Try it and you’ll see
I read on CNBC about someone who is netting $20k a month himself from just his tradings in the market, which is from capital he had amassed long ago. That is incredible. How do people do that?
It's really not as difficult as many people presume it to be. It requires a certain level of diligence, which is something ordinary investors lack, and a financial advisor often comes in very handy.
I think that is a brilliant idea, I tried managing my stock portfolio by myself and I lost 50% of my savings in a very short period. That prompted me to hire a financial advisor. Since then I have made up to $680K in returns.