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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This means those dividends get taxed at a lower rate than the same amount of interest income; for example, investors in the highest tax bracket pay tax of about 29% on dividends, compared to 50% on interest income.
The tax on capital gains is even lower, at roughly 25%....
The units held up well last year—and the trust maintained its distributions—despite retail shutdowns due to COVID-19. That’s mainly because its high-quality tenants, such as supermarkets and pharmacies, remained open as “essential” businesses....
These include BCE, Bank of Nova Scotia, Thomson Reuters, TC Energy, Sun Life Financial, Enbridge and Telus....
Long-time readers know that we keep you informed of important news about the stocks we cover. That means highlighting developments that promise to brighten your prospects. Here are two buys that stand out this month:
WAJAX CORP. $19.68 (Toronto symbol WJX; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk) (www.wajax.ca; Shares outstanding: 21.5 million; Market cap: $417.3 million; Divd....
ENBRIDGE INC....
FORTIS INC....
RIOCAN REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUST $20 remains a buy. This REIT (Toronto symbol REI.UN; Aggressive Growth Portfolio, Manufacturing & Industry sector; Units outstanding: 317.7 million; Market cap: $6.4 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 5.5; Distribution yield: 4.8%; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www.riocan.com) owns all or part of 223 shopping centres and other properties across Canada, with 38.3 million square feet of gross leasable space....
The Well comprises 1.2 million square feet of office space plus 420,000 square feet of retail space....