The truth about Dividend Investing

 

Dividend Investor


 It's so cool to see dividends coming right? owning companies that pay you dividend it's  so satisfying.  Yet we have to look at facts  and objectively speaking dividend investing is so inefficient way of investing and that includes all forms of dividend investing including  dividend growth investing, reinvesting dividends or living off dividends.



First of all we have to remember that dividends usually come from business earnings  ,a company that pays dividends has less money to re-invest and  grow. I say usually because a company can also borrow money to pay a dividend , but that is working for only a short period of time  . All people before retirement should only care for the growth of the value of the portfolio and not for the dividends they get from it. That's  because they are net contributors to their portfolio, they dont use the dividends to cover their expenses  ,meaning any form of return they get is re-invested to grow their portfolio till they reach their goal . By buying dividends stocks they just choose to take some money from the business  and reinvest them themselves instead of trusting the business. To be  clear it's not bad for  a company to pay a dividend, it's realistic. Money that cant be used  to bring   the required growth  for the perceived risk an  investor  gets by holding the stock   are better to be returned.Also more often than not businesses retain money to grow while it would be better to give back the money, if  that's the case we are talking about, this  can be reflected to a lower price, every stock price comes from expected returns. If you pay the right price even  if a company  doesnt do the best thing, you can get you fair market returns or even better than fair market returns if the stock is mispriced and positive surprises happen in the future. On the contrary a company that does everything at it's optimum can give you worse returns  than "fair" because maybe you bought at  a very high price  when  all the positives were priced , no negative changes were considered and not much room for positive surprises were left .  The whole point is that it all comes to valuation. And the stock market works that way,  stocks that  pay dividends can be bad or good investments for you , even if they are good companies that afford to pay dividends. They can give you bad returns if you overpay for them , it doesnt matter if they pay a dividend or not. If you are not using the money from dividends to cover your expenses but to re-invest them, then focusing on the dividends  is an illusion . 

Dividend investing methods

 DRIP

That's when you choose instead of receiving the dividend to get it automatically re-invested in the same stock. What  is called DRIP, if the broker doesnt offer this choice, the investor can do this manually. That's like the company doing a buyback ,  that would only make sense if the stock was undervalued, the company decided to give you that money but you chose to buyback more of the stock. There is no rational reason behind doing this if you are dividend investor and you want the dividend. If you think that the company allocates the money it earns efficiently, then let it do the buybacks , and buy more of the stock if you have a reason to believe it''s undervalued. There are many companies that choose to do buybacks instead of paying a dividend but dividend investors ignore them

Dividend growth investing

 Nothing original here too, dividend investors fooling themselves that they are getting better returns from simple dividend investors by  investing in companies that grow their dividends yearly by more than 10%. Usually these companies have low dividend yield, lower than 2%.  Well again for this to become a 4%-5%  dividend yield  on cost stock ,it would take so many years that there is no real advantage of buying these over a no growing reliable  high dividend yield stock .If you only care for dividends and no capital appreciation, to see any excess  return from the low yield ,high dividend growth stock you may have to wait more than a decade .  What you actually do  is avoiding high dividend yield stocks that have more risk of being value traps than low yield stocks . So instead of higher  dividend performance  what you really  get is more safety by avoiding stagnating  or  companies on decline.


Living off dividends

If you are at the stage you have enough capital to retire then putting all your money on dividend stocks,  is a strategy that is not giving you better returns or safety.  If you are at the stage you can really live from passive income ,you are better doing  this by having a well diversified portfolio  that not consists only of dividend stocks. When the market crash , you will see your portfolio crash even if you hold dividend stocks you will feel the pain, you can also see companies cut dividends because they are changing the plans to avoid future risks.  The yield you usually aim from a dividend stock portfolio would be anyway less that 4%, that's your aim when you want to live off dividends. But there is a safer way to get a similar and better  yield from your portfolio without  relying on dividends and  constantly having to check the updates of  the companies you hold. You move into a fixed portfolio that allocates your money into Gold, Government bonds ,cash, commodities  and stocks. That way you can create a portfolio that gives you the returns you want with less risk. You get your returns by adjusting it  every year or quarter or whatever you choose , there are many  portfolios like these. That way you take advantage of  all the possible assets that the money can flow into  ,you have no need to assess individual companies and you reduce the risk of markets violent swings  .  You wont to  have to worry if  a company decides to cut the dividend , don't bet on that when a company does this you will sell the stock, the moment that this happens you will see the price of the stock fall significantly and you will lose more  than the small dividend


There is no real objective advantage of buying dividend stocks if you are active investor, only psychological advantages which ofcourse are of high importance ,that can make dividend investing strategy worth following.  You can follow any  strategy you want , you can do what you feel more comfortable doing and dividend investing  it's a good way to start but not a place to hide an investors ignorance  . I personally like dividend stocks if i considered them undervalued because  you can wait and collect some money while you are waiting the stock to come to their  fair value , i know how tempting is to look at dividends but i try to not stick to that especially when i chase big returns , i have to focus on where the excess returns come and those  come  by  capital appreciation when the stock is priced less on what fundamentals, growth  opportunities and risk indicate.


Tracking Results Q1 2021

 See about how i track results here

  The first quarter of 2021 was pretty static .I made a positive return but that was very marginal. Most of my returns came from Macys  appreciation and facebook steadily going up, but that was offset by the substantial losses i got from increasing my position in Pireus Bank which 2 months after increasing my position announced share capital increase . That's another lesson of how careful someone should be when buying banks, price to book ratio which is one of the most loved ratios when buying banks can leave you with a false feeling  of confidence  that you have a big margin of safety.  Asset quality is very important and in the environment that banks work  where capital requirements can change any time,they may force banks quickly change their leverage profile ,even if  banks  have returned to profitability, they may  be forced to do big clean ups in their balance sheet at the expense of shareholders. 

Equity: 12 working Salaries (money i have contributed to the market till now)

Closed positions:

Paperpack Manufacturer (PPAK) : + 65.7 %
Public Power Corporation (DEH): + 65.19
National bank of Greece(ETE): + 99.89%
Pireus Bank: +64.61 %

Profit from closed positions: 4,8 working salaries.


 Portfolio: 
 My Portfolio now  consists of 6 stocks. 

2 Greek stocks: Tpeir (Pireus Bank) and Alphabank.
2 energy stocks: Gulfport Energy (a natural gas upstream company) and Gazprom the biggest natural gas producer in the world 
Lastly i have Facebook and  Macy's.

  In the following  graphs i list the stocks By weight, Country and Sector-industry





 
Total Loss: 2  working salaries

Year on Year monthly  passive income:  - 69% of  monthly working Salary

 2021 1st Quarter Results (monthly adjusted): 5% of monthly working salary  every month

 ROI   ↓ -15.5%  ( This is the total returns i got from my net contributions since i have started investing in the market)

 

Performance Comparison
 
4rd quarter
My portfolio: 1.31%
S&P: 6.18%

1 year
My portfolio:13.75%
S&P: 56.36%

Tracking Results: 2020 Year end Results

 See about how i track results here

 

2020 was a very bad  year for my portfolio but also was a year i learned a lot about the stock market and investing in general. My big position on Gulfport Energy ripped off all of my gains from previous closed positions. My positions on Greek banks, Gazprom and Macys start recovering, while Facebook remained a stable winner.  Now there is a small chance that Gulfport makes a small recovery but probably i will lose the few euros left on it. Recovering has already started, i already hit the bottom. So i think better days are coming. During the last quarter i didn't add or sell any of my positions.


Equity: 12 working Salaries (money i have contributed to the market till now)

Closed positions:

Paperpack Manufacturer (PPAK) : + 65.7 %
Public Power Corporation (DEH): + 65.19
National bank of Greece(ETE): + 99.89%
Pireus Bank: +64.61 %

Profit from closed positions: 4,8 working salaries.


 Portfolio: 
 My Portfolio now  consists of 6 stocks. 

2 Greek stocks: Tpeir (Pireus Bank) and Alphabank.
2 energy stocks: Gulfport Energy (a natural gas upstream company) and Gazprom the biggest natural gas producer in the world 
Lastly i have Facebook and  Macy's.

  In the following  graphs i list the stocks By weight, Country and Sector-industry

 




 




Total Loss: 2  working salaries

Year on Year monthly  passive income:  - 69% of  monthly working Salary

 2020 4rd Quarter Results (monthly adjusted): 19% of monthly working salary  every month

 ROI   ↓ -16.7%  ( This is the total returns i got from my net contributions since i have started investing in the market)

 

Performance Comparison
 
4rd quarter
My portfolio: 6.48%
S&P: 12.14%

1 year
My portfolio:↓ -48.8%
S&P: 18.4%

Tracking Results: 3rd Quarter 2020

 

See about how i track results here

 
In the 3nd quarter   i almost entirely lost the gains from 2nd quarter recovery , i didnt invest in any new stocks and i have left my portfolio without any new changes. Gulfport energy stock dragged my portfolio way down and i am currently  holding many losing stocks  with  high risk and with quite depressing expectations outlook  .  I still remain positive about the future and my ability to do better choices and achieve high returns.  If Gulfport dont go bust, i am not expecting big losses in the next quarter since my losers already lost most of their value.

Equity: 12 working Salaries (money i have contributed to the market till now)

Closed positions:

Paperpack Manufacturer (PPAK) : + 65.7 %
Public Power Corporation (DEH): + 65.19
National bank of Greece(ETE): + 99.89%
Pireus Bank: +64.61 %

Profit from closed positions: 4,8 working salaries.


 Portfolio: 
 My Portfolio now  consists of 6 stocks. 

2 Greek stocks: Tpeir (Pireus Bank) and Alphabank.
2 energy stocks: Gulfport Energy (a natural gas upstream company) and Gazprom the biggest natural gas producer in the world 
Lastly i have Facebook and  Macy's.

  In the following  graphs i list the stocks By weight, Country and Sector-industry

 


 



Total Loss: 2.6 working salaries

Year on Year monthly  passive income:  - 50% of  monthly working Salary

 2020 3rd Quarter Results (monthly adjusted): lost about  70% of monthly working salary  every month

 ROI   ↓ -21.5%  ( This is the total returns i got from my net contributions since i have started investing in the market)


Performance Comparison
 
3rd quarter
My portfolio: ↓-18.29%
S&P: 8.47%

1 year
My portfolio:↓-45.1%
S&P: 10.7%

10 largest Market cap Hypothetical Portfolio 1 year returns

 Last year i decided to track a simple strategy of investing in the 10 largest market cap stocks for a year and then re-balance it every year. The results were stunning.

The hypothetical portfolio was based on a initial capital of about 10,000 euros . Each stock would approximately  weight about 10% of the portfolio. Since some stocks were very expensive they got more. Same with re-balancing. The re-balance wont be perfect. But more or less i will be close in following the strategy of owning the 10 largest cap stocks. This strategy is simple.

The stocks were bought in 9/9/2019.  Total Amount Invested: 11,216.13$

So here are the stocks that made the list:

1. Microsoft (8 stocks, price:136)   1088$ (weigh: 9.7%)

2. Apple (16 stocks, price: 55.90)  894.4$ (weigh: 7.97%)

3. Amazon ( 1 stock, price: 1833.51) 1833.51$ (weigh: 16.35%)

4. Alphabet A-Google (1 stock, price: 1205.7) 1205.7$ ( weigh: 10.75%)

5. Facebook ( 7 stocks, price: 190.9) 1336.3$ (11.9%)

6. Berkshire Hathaway ( 4 stocks, price: 210.91) 843.64$ (weigh: 7.5%)

7. Alibaba  (7 stocks, price: 170.78) 1195.46$ (weigh: 10.66% )

8. Tencent ( 20 stocks, price: 43.3) 866$ (weigh: 7.72% )

9. JPMorgan (8 stocks, price: 117.19)  937.52$ (weigh: 10.66% )

10. Johnson & Johnson ( 8 stocks, price: 126.95) 1015.6$ (weigh: 8.36%)




1 year later the portfolio  appreciated 45%,beating S&P and most of all other  portfolios you will find.  I assumed 30% tax on dividends and no transaction costs .

Here is a more detailed view of the returns

1. Apple (↑ 103.95%)  +dividends   (↑ 108.19%)

2. Amazon ( ↑79.11%)

3. Alibaba (↑57.5%)

4. Microsoft (↑ 51.35%) +dividends   (↑ 52.40%)

5. Tencent (↑50.07%) +dividends   (↑ 50.31%)

6. Facebook (↑40.92%)

7.  Alphabet A-Google (↑24.42%)

8. Johnson & Johnson ( ↑15.72%) +dividends   (↑17.88 %)

9. Berkshire Hathaway (↑3.27%)

10. JPMorgan (↓-14.30%)  +dividends   (↓-12.15%)

Total: 16,289.805 (↑45.24%)

 

 

Now that was  time to reallocate. Amazon was too big to do any sale  but i tried with the rest to do the best i could. First, 2 stocks needed to be removed from the list was JP Morgan and marginally Johnson and Johnson. New additions would be Visa and Walmart. Since Johnson and Johnson was very close to Walmart, i kept it and i  only replaced  JP Morgan with Visa.  

I sold 3 shares of Apple, 2 shares of Alibaba, 1 share of Facebook, 1 share of  Microsoft and all shares of J&P Morgan. That gave me back cash of 2180.85.44$ , 407.17$ were profits. With that cash and the total dividends i received in one year period of 93.575$. I bought  1 more share of J&J, 3 shares of Berkshire Hathaway and added 7 shares of Visa to the portfolio.  


Here how the Portfolio is at 10/09/2020 after re- allocation. Total: 16244$ + cash: 45.805

1. Microsoft (7 stocks, price:205.37)   1437.59$ (weigh: 8.85%)

2. Apple (13 stocks, price:113.49) 1475.37$ (weigh:9.01%)

3. Amazon ( 1 stock, price: 3284) 3284$ (weigh: 20.22%)

4. Alphabet A-Google (1 stock, price: 1526.05) 1526.05$ ( weigh: 9.39%)

5. Facebook ( 6 stocks, price: 268.09) 1608.54$ (9.9%)

6. Berkshire Hathaway ( 7 stocks, price: 217.8) 1524.6$ (weigh: 9.38%)

7. Alibaba  (5 stocks, price: 267.55) 1337.75$ (weigh: 8.23% )

8. Tencent ( 20 stocks, price: 64.98) 1299.6$ (weigh: 8% )

9. Johnson & Johnson ( 9 stocks, price: 146.91) 1322.19$ (weigh: 8.14%)

10. Visa ( 7 stocks, price: 204.17) 1429.19$ (weigh: 8.8%)



10 largest market cap stocks portfolio

So as you see the Amazon stock is more weighed due to the high price of stock per share relative to the size of the portfolio. In the future they will probably make a stock split and would be easier to weigh it on near the 10% target.  

45% returns in such a troubled period shows how the large market players  can gain instead of losing during a crisis by wiping out smaller players . 

 By comparison S&P returns during that period with dividends were around 14.1%.

 10 Largest market cap stocks returns: (↑45.24%)

S&P Returns:  (↑14.08%)

Nadaq returns: (↑35%)

S&P Outperformance:   31.16%

Nasdaq Outperformance:   10.24%


Lets see how the next year will be!  With this easy to apply strategy