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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Canadian Utilities continues to invest in projects that will make Alberta’s electricity grid more reliable. For example, it recently spent $650 million to build 355 kilometres of new transmission lines and substations in the province’s southeast.
Thanks to these new assets, Canadian Utilities earned $587 million in 2013, up 6.1% from $553 million in 2012. Earnings per share rose 3.5%, to $2.09 from $2.02, on more shares outstanding. Without unusual items, mainly deferred payments from or refunds paid to customers, earnings would have risen 11.1%. Revenue gained 11.3%, to $3.4 billion from $3.0 billion.
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In all, these orders are worth $75 million. That’s equal to 3% of CAE’s annual revenue of $2.2 billion.
Including these deals, CAE has sold 48 simulators in its 2014 fiscal year, which ended March 31, 2014. That’s up 37.1% from the 35 it sold in 2013. It also beats the company’s previous all-time high of 38 simulator sales in fiscal 1998.
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RIOCAN REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUST $27
(Toronto symbol REI.UN; Aggressive Growth Portfolio, Manufacturing & Industry sector; Units outstanding: 303.2 million; Market cap: $8.2 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 5.8; Dividend yield: 5.2%; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www.riocan.com) started up in 1993 and is now Canada’s largest REIT. In Canada, it owns all or part of 293 shopping centres, including 16 under development. These holdings account for 85% of its rental revenue. The remaining 15% comes from 47 malls in the U.S. In the wake of the recession, RioCan took advantage of lower property values and interest rates to expand its portfolio. As a result, its revenue jumped 52.0%, from $758 million in 2009 to $1.15 billion in 2013....This terminal was one of two (the other is near Saint John, New Brunswick) that are part of TransCanada’s proposed Energy East pipeline project, which would pump crude oil from Alberta to refineries in Eastern Canada.
TransCanada is now looking for an alternative site. That will delay Energy East for at least two years, to 2020, and add to its $12-billion cost. However, cancelling the Cacouna terminal makes it more likely that regulators will approve the project.
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The company has shut down less profitable wells in response to weak oil and gas prices. That’s why its average production fell 7.7% in the first quarter of 2015, to 69,334 barrels a day (52% oil and liquids, 48% gas) from 75,102 a year earlier. Without unusual items, Pengrowth earned $64.8 million, compared to a loss of $2.8 million. Cash flow per share fell 22.2%, to $0.21 from $0.27.
For the remainder of 2015, the company has hedged 78% of its oil production at $93.87 (Canadian) a barrel, well above today’s price of $60.16 U.S. It has also hedged 57% of its gas output at $3.72 (Canadian) per thousand cubic feet, compared to the current price of $2.94 U.S. The company’s hedges were worth $354.3 million as of March 31, 2015.
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