Dividends can produce as much as a third of your total return over long periods, and you can even retire on dividends.
There are 4 key stock dividend dates that are involved with dividend payments:
1- The Declaration Date is several weeks in advance of a dividend payment—it’s when company’s board of directors sets the amount and timing of the proposed payment.
2- The Payable Date is the date set by the board on which the dividend will actually be paid out to shareholders.
3- The Record Date is for shareholders who hold the stock before the payable date and receive the dividend payment. That date is set any number of weeks before the payable date.
4-The Ex-Dividend Date is two business days before the record date and it’s when the shares begin to trade without their dividend. If you buy stocks one day or more before their ex-dividend date, you will still get the dividend. That’s when a stock is said to trade cum-dividend. If you buy on the ex-dividend date or later, you won’t get the dividend. The ex-dividend date is in place to allow pending stock trades to settle.
We think very highly of stocks that have been paying dividends for five or more years, at TSI Network. Many of these stocks fit in well with our three-part Successful Investor philosophy:
1- Invest mainly in well-established companies;
2- Spread your money out across most if not all of the five main economic sectors (Manufacturing & Industry; Resources & Commodities; Consumer; Finance; and Utilities);
3- Downplay or avoid stocks in the broker/media limelight.
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U.S.-based ConocoPhillips (New York symbol COP) owns 50% of Cenovus’s main Foster Creek and Christina Lake oil sands projects in Alberta. These properties produce heavy bitumen, which Cenovus ships to its 50%-owned refineries in Illinois and Texas. Phillips 66 (New York symbol PSX) owns the other 50% of these refineries. In 2013, refining accounted for 66% of Cenovus’s revenue and 40% of its earnings.
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The company lost $92.6 million, or $1.88 a share, in 2013. That’s a big drop from the $25.2 million, or $0.29 a share, it earned in 2012. Revenue fell 6.3%, to $200.7 million from $214.2 million.
The declines are mainly because weak commodity prices hurt the contribution of Dundee’s resource holdings. As well, fewer firms issued shares in 2013, which hurt profits at its Dundee Securities brokerage firm. The company is also spending more to expand its agriculture businesses, which further depressed results.
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This strong demand should prompt Trans- Canada to expand the ANR line over the next few years. That would let it handle rising production at the Utica and Marcellus shale gas fields in New York State and Pennsylvania.
TransCanada is a buy....
This move is part of the company’s plan to buy back up to 5.3 million of its common shares, or roughly 3% of the total outstanding, by March 16, 2015. Share buybacks raise earnings per share and other per-share calculations, and give the remaining shareholders a larger stake in the company.
CP Rail is a buy....
Shareholders recently approved a $72.00-a-share takeover offer from Mexican bakery giant Grupo Bimbo SAB. Competition regulators in Canada and the U.S. have also approved the deal.
Canada Bread’s shares are trading slightly higher than the bid. That’s because the deal lets the company keep paying quarterly dividends of up to $0.75 a share until Grupo Bimbo completes the takeover, probably by June 30, 2014. Before the deal, Canada Bread paid quarterly dividends of $0.50 a share.
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The bank continues to integrate Milwaukee-based Marshall & Ilsley, which it bought in 2011. The move doubled the size of its U.S. retail banking business. Bank of Montreal has already cut this division’s annual costs by $400 million, which should help it meet its goal of raising this business’s earnings to $1 billion in 2015.
Bank of Montreal is a buy....
As of December 31, 2013, IGM had $131.8 billion of assets under management, up 9.2% from $120.7 billion at the end of 2012. The company’s fee income rises and falls with the value of the securities it manages, so its revenue and earnings gain when the price of these assets rises.
In 2013, IGM’s earnings rose 2.3%, to $763.5 million from $746.4 million in 2012. Per-share earnings gained 3.4%, to $3.02 from $2.92, on fewer shares outstanding. Revenue for the year increased 3.7%, to $2.7 billion from $2.6 billion. Sales of mutual funds rose 22.1%, while fund redemptions fell 33.7%.
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The company continues to benefit from its recent $1.75-billion purchase of Irish Life Group, Ireland’s largest pension manager and life insurance provider.
If you exclude integration costs, Great-West earned $2.05 billion in 2013, including $85 million of profits from Irish Life. The latest earnings are also up 5.4% from $1.95 billion in 2012. Due to more shares outstanding, earnings per share rose 2.9%, to $2.11 from $2.05.
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Thomson earned $137 million, or $0.16 a share, in 2013 (all amounts except share price and market cap in U.S. dollars). That’s down sharply from $2.0 billion, or $2.39 a share, in 2012.
Financial institutions continue to cut their spending on information products in the wake of the 2008 credit crisis. In response, Thomson is cutting jobs and eliminating less-profitable products.
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Loblaw paid $12.4 billion, consisting of $6.6 billion in cash and $5.8 billion in shares. Shoppers shareholders now own 29% of the combined company.
In all, the firm will have $43 billion of annual revenue and $3 billion of gross earnings. Combining marketing and distribution should save $100 million in the first year and $300 million annually by the end of the third year.
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