Dividend Stocks

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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Dividend Stocks Library Archive
AGRIUM INC. $83 (Toronto symbol AGU; Aggressive Growth Portfolio, Resources sector; Shares outstanding: 158.0 million; Market cap: $13.1 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 0.8; Dividend yield: 0.5%; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www.agrium.com) makes fertilizers from natural gas. It sells its products to farmers and industrial users through its more than 1,200 stores in North America, South America and Australia. The company’s retail outlets help shield it from volatile fertilizer prices. Agrium continues to add more stores. It recently agreed to pay $1.65 billion (all amounts except share price and market cap in U.S. dollars) for 230 outlets in western Canada operated by Viterra Inc. It will also purchase Viterra’s 17 stores in Australia, plus its 34% stake in a fertilizer plant in Alberta. Agrium will buy these businesses from Glencore International plc, which is now in the process of taking over Viterra. Previous acquisitions boosted results ...
BELL ALIANT INC. $26 (www.aliant.ca) earned $0.45 a share in the three months ended March 31, 2012. That’s up 2.3% from $0.44 a year earlier. Revenue was unchanged at $682.0 million. Strong demand for high-speed Internet and TV services offset lower local and long distance revenue. Buy. BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA $53 (www.scotiabank.com) will get $93 million in earnings from Scotiabank Mexico, its Mexican subsidiary, in its current quarter. That’s small next to the $1.3 billion, or $1.20 a share, that Bank of Nova Scotia earned in the quarter ended January 31, 2012. However, the Mexican operation’s earnings are rising sharply: they’re up 24.0% from a year earlier due to strong loan growth and lower loan-loss provisions. Best Buy. BANK OF MONTREAL $56 (www.bmo.com) has opened an office in Abu Dhabi. This will help it take advantage of rising demand for wealth management services in the United Arab Emirates. Buy.
THE WESTAIM CORP., $0.73, Toronto symbol WED, owns Jevco Insurance Co., which sells insurance to high-risk drivers, as well as owners of motorcycles, snowmobiles and recreational vehicles. Jevco operates in Ontario, Quebec and Alberta. Westaim bought Jevco for $264.2 million in March 2010. Westaim jumped 9% this week after it agreed to sell Jevco to Intact Financial Corp. (Toronto symbol IFC); Intact is a recommendation of Stock Pickers Digest, our newsletter that focuses on aggressive investing. Westaim will receive $530 million when the sale closes in the fall of 2012. That’s equal to 1.3 times its market cap of $423.7 million....
CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAY CO., $84.39, Toronto symbol CNR, operates Canada’s largest freight-rail network. The company also serves 16 U.S. states. CN earned $775 million in the three months ended March 31, 2012. That’s up 16.0% from $668 million a year earlier. Earnings per share rose 20.7%, to $1.75 from $1.45, on fewer shares outstanding. If you exclude one-time items in both years, such as gains on the sale of rail lines in Southern Ontario, earnings per share rose 31.1%, to $1.18 from $0.90. On this basis, CN’s earnings beat the consensus estimate of $1.03 a share....
CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY LTD., $76.45, Toronto symbol CP, reported higher-than-expected earnings this week. In the three months ended March 31, 2012, the company’s earnings soared 317.6%, to $142.0 million from $34.0 million a year earlier. Earnings per share rose 310.0%, to $0.82 from $0.20, on more shares outstanding. That beat the consensus estimate of $0.75 a share. Severe winter weather and avalanches in B.C. delayed the company’s trains and depressed the year-earlier results. This was the main reason for the earnings jump....
CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY LTD., $75.67, Toronto symbol CP, is starting to benefit from its recent efficiency improvements. As well, more of its trains are running on time, thanks to the warmer-than-usual winter. In the three months ended March 31, 2012, CP’s average train speed rose 27% from a year earlier. It also had 28% more railcars in service, and terminal dwell (the time to load and unload railcars) fell 27%. As a result, CP now believes that it earned $0.80 to $0.83 a share in the quarter. That’s a lot better than the consensus estimate of $0.65 a share....
Low interest rates continue to fuel loan demand at Canada’s big five banks. However, rising competition for new borrowers has forced all five to launch aggressive new promotions—including special mortgage rates as low as 2.99%—that are weighing on their profits. Even so, we continue to see all five banks as buys. In fact, every Canadian investor should own two or three of them. For new buying, Bank of Nova Scotia remains our favourite. It’s the most international of Canada’s banks, and it’s in a particularly strong position to profit from rising prosperity in Asia and Latin America. That cuts its reliance on slower growing regions like North America and Europe....
PENGROWTH ENERGY CORP. $8.96 (Toronto symbol PGF; Aggressive Growth Portfolio, Resources sector; Shares outstanding: 360.3 million; Market cap: $3.2 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 2.1; Dividend yield: 9.4%; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www.pengrowth.com) has a long history of using acquisitions to expand, which adds risk. However, these purchases have increased its reserves and cash flow. Its latest acquisition is NAL Energy Corp. (Toronto symbol NAE). NAL investors will receive 0.86 of a Pengrowth common share for each share they hold. That will give them 26% of the combined company. The deal should close by May 31, 2012. Adding NAL’s properties in Alberta and B.C. (54% natural gas and 46% oil) will increase Pengrowth’s projected 2012 production by about 16%, to between 86,000 and 89,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day....
Bank of Nova Scotia is our top pick among Canada’s five main banks, but the other four also have bright prospects. Most are using their strong balance sheets to make profitable acquisitions at bargain prices. That should let them keep raising their dividends. ROYAL BANK OF CANADA $56 (Toronto symbol RY; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Finance sector; Shares outstanding: 1.4 billion; Market cap: $78.4 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 2.2; Dividend yield: 4.1%; TSINetwork Rating: Above Average; www.rbc.com) is Canada’s largest bank, with $815.0 billion of assets. The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) recently accused Royal of using a complex series of trades to cut its tax bill in Canada. Specifically, the CFTC says that divisions of the bank bought Canadian and U.S. dividend-paying stocks (plus futures contracts on these stocks) and quickly sold them to other divisions. These transactions would let Royal earn tax credits on the dividends it received from these holdings....
DUNDEE CORP. $24 (Toronto symbol DC.A; Aggressive Growth Portfolio, Finance sector; Shares outstanding: 55.0 million; Market cap: $1.3 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 6.6; No dividends paid; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www.dundeecorp.com) is a holding company with subsidiaries in wealth management, real estate, resources and agriculture. Dundee is riskier than the big five banks. That’s because sales of individual investments can have a big impact on its earnings. For example, in 2011, it recorded an $870.8-million gain on the sale of subsidiary DundeeWealth. Without that gain, Dundee’s earnings fell 13.1%, to $173.2 million from $199.3 million in 2010. Earnings per share rose 5.9%, to $2.17 from $2.05, on fewer shares outstanding. Revenue fell 15.7%, to $574.0 million from $680.8 million. Dundee is still a buy.