dividend

A dividend is a cash payout that serves as a way for companies to share the profits they’ve accumulated through their operations. These payouts are drawn from earnings and cash flow paid to the shareholders of the company. Commonly these dividends are paid quarterly, although they may also be paid annually or even monthly as well. A dividend can produce as much as a quarter of your total return over long periods. Some good companies reinvest profits instead of paying a dividend. But fraudulent and failing companies hardly ever pay a dividend. So if you only buy stocks that pay dividends, you’ll automatically stay out of almost all the market’s worst stocks. For a true measure of stability, focus on companies that have maintained or raised their dividends during recessions and stock market downturns. These firms leave themselves enough room to handle periods of earnings volatility. By continually rewarding investors, and retaining enough cash to finance their businesses, they provide an attractive mix of safety, income and growth. Dividends are an important contributor to your long-term gains, and dividend-paying stocks tend to expose you to less risk than non-dividend-payers. That’s why the majority of your stocks should be dividend-payers at all times. As you get older and closer to retirement, you should raise the proportion of dividend-paying stocks in your portfolio, to cut risk and improve the stability of your investment results. To maximize your investment returns with the least risk, follow TSI Network and use our three-part Successful Investor strategy:

  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; Utilities);
  3. Downplay or avoid stocks in the broker/media limelight.

Discover how to put an extra strength in your portfolio with our specific advice on how to identify high-quality dividend stocks. It’s all in our newly updated report, Dividend Paying Stocks: How High Dividend Stocks Can Supercharge Your Income Investing. And it’s yours FREE!

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Use a spinoff strategy to target investments that are often highly undervalued and come with lot of portfolio-building power
A: Park Lawn Corporation, $19.98, symbol PLC on Toronto (Shares outstanding: 28.9 million; Market cap: $581.0 million; www.parklawncorp.com), is a funeral home, cemetery, and cremation services provider with operations throughout North America.

The company owns and operates 114 cemeteries, 39 crematoriums, and 109 funeral homes; it also sells cemetery lots, crypts, niches, monuments, caskets, urns, and funeral services....
A: Eli Lilly & Co., $155.03, symbol LLY on New York (Shares outstanding: 957.0 million; Market cap: $151.0 billion; www.lilly.com), has now recovered all of the gains it lost in the market downturn....
Nutrien’s shares dropped as much as 33% in the recent market downturn—from $52 to as low as $35. But the stock has rebounded to today’s price and is now down just 5%.

The recovery has come as investors have realized that for a number of reasons, the company’s outlook is strong, and the stock offers you an attractive mix of growth and income.

Key to Nutrien’s near-term prospects during the COVID-19 crisis is that the whole food supply chain has been designated as an essential priority service by most governments including the U.S....
Discover how to make investments in Canada successfully by understanding the best types of growth investments to add to your portfolio
Invest in the highest dividend Canadian stocks to supercharge your portfolio returns
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Introduction


Successful Investors always give dividend stocks the respect they deserve and most view them as the foundation of a sound and profitable investment portfolio.

But finding the right dividend payers can be challenging for new investors as well as experienced ones....
As our subscriber, you know that ACI Worldwide and Broadridge are not household names. Still, you also know that does nothing to diminish the vital role they play for corporations relying on their back-office supports.


In addition, you should know that both of these service providers have business models that will let them prosper despite COVID-19’s huge economic and social impact.


That’s why we continue to see both ACI Worldwide and Broadridge as buys for your future gains.


ACI WORLDWIDE, $24.32, is a buy. The company (Nasdaq symbol ACIW; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk) (www.aciworldwide.com; Shares outstanding: 116.1 million; Market cap: $2.9 billion; No dividends paid) makes software for processing transactions by credit cards, debit cards, automated teller machines, point-of-sale terminals and interbank systems....
Despite the COVID-19 outbreak, Goodfood continues to gain more and more customers. The stock is now up almost 20% for investors since we first recommended it in our December 2019 issue of Power Growth Investor at $3.02.


Goodfood’s stellar results in the latest quarter came before the COVID-19 virus really began to force Canadians to stay home....