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Posts Tagged ‘Dividend’

Income is The Payout Ratio

May 23rd, 2010

To make sure an income stock you are considering can continue to raise its dividend, you should determine that the company is financially strong. You can do this by analyzing the company’s debt. Debt that is more than 50 percent of the company’s equity may be a sign of trouble. Another quick way to gauge financial strength is to check the stock’s rating with a reputable credit rating agency’s ratings, such as Standard & Poor’s Stock Guide. Any rating over B+ means that the company is financially solid.

The final ratio to inspect before you buy a stock for income is the payout ratio, the percentage of earnings that is paid out in dividends. A payout ratio below 60 percent means that there is a sizable cushion for the company to fall back on before it has to cut its dividend. A low ratio also leaves room for the dividend to grow.

On the other hand, a payout ratio above 60 percent might be a sign that the dividend may be cut. Don’t be entranced by a stock that sports an above-average yield, usually of more than 10 percent. There must be a reason why the yield is that high, and probably it is not positive.

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The Business To Make it Grow Faster

May 14th, 2010

As a shareholder, you are also entitled to receive quarterly updates on how your company is doing. You will be mailed a report that tells you whether  profits were up or down and what other major corporate developments occurred in the last three months. You will also get a more detailed annual report outlining how the numbers for the latest year compare with prior years, as well as the company’s plan for the future. You will also be invited to vote at the firm’s annual meeting, either in person at the meeting or by a mail proxy ballot. You will vote on important matters, such as whether a major acquisition should be completed. At most companies, you get one vote for every share you own. So unless you own an enormous number of shares, you shouldn’t expect to have much influence over the company’s strategic direction. For the most part, you are along for the ride while the professionals running the company do their best to maximize profits.

In addition to the profit potential from a rising share price, you can earn money from stocks by collecting dividends. If the corporation is profitable and the board of directors decides it is prudent, the firm will send you a quarterly check for your piece of the profits, known as a dividend. Dividends are normally paid by large, well-established companies that are sure they will achieve a certain level of profit each year. Smaller and newer firms usually do not pay dividends because they want to reinvest all of their profits back in the business to make it grow faster.

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Capitalist Meant Being an Investor

January 9th, 2010

In the eighteenth century, “capitalist” was understood by social philosophers, by economic thinkers, and by the educated public as a person who invests money in public debt or in stock, and expects an annuity or a dividend. A capitalist was someone who did not have to work for a living, nor live off land revenue, nor have profits from manufacture or trade. His revenue was derived from the financial securities he owned and traded. At the dawn of the modern era, being a capitalist meant being an investor . Only toward the end of the century did Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations give a new, abstract twist to the term “capitalist.”

A superficial observer could say that Adam Smith has not depicted a central figure of capitalism, being too busy with the grand tableau of the national economy. Yet Smith’s economic landscape is not empty, but populated by a whole array of figures, some of which are of central importance. Increasing the nation’s wealth is, in Adam Smith’s eyes, the ultimate aim of economic life. While agriculture, trade, and other economic activities may contribute to increases in wealth, manufacture remains the key branch of the economy. Great nations excel in manufacture , this latter, superior in skills and productivity to agriculture, is the core of the economy. All other economic activities—like banking and trade—are subordinated to increasing the industry of the country.

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