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Turn an Ordinary Dividend Into a Double- or Triple-Digit Yield
By Tom Dyson
October 13, 2008

Some folks are happy with a 2% dividend.

But that's probably because they don't know about a strategy that allows them to collect a 40% dividend... from the exact same stock.

This little-known income boost can make a huge difference. I call this strategy the "424 Dividend Boost" because companies that offer these plans detail them in prospectus-like documents called 424 documents. The technical name for these programs is "Dividend Reinvestment Plans" (DRIPs).

DRIPs are schemes where companies sell their stock direct to the investing public. It's like buying a pair of sneakers from a "factory direct" outlet instead of going to Foot Locker at the mall. The absence of broker fees is a popular benefit of DRIPs. By buying stock direct from the company, you avoid the commissions or fees brokers and money managers charge.

DRIPs offer many other benefits: discounted shares, automatic small monthly payments (even if the amount you pay buys only a fraction of a share), optional cash purchase of additional shares directly from the company, and automatic dividend reinvestment, sometimes at a discount.

DRIPs are a convenient, cost-effective tool for investing in stocks. But the real magic in DRIPs happens when you pick DRIP stocks that pay larger dividends each year.

Let's say you enroll in a DRIP. Shares trade for $10 each and you buy 100 shares. Total cost: $1,000. Let's say the stock yields 5% and the dividend does not grow. We'll assume the share price stays fixed at $10 for simplicity's sake.

After 12 years, your 5% dividend yield has turned into a 9% yield.

Now, let's assume this company grows its dividend by 10% each year. So the 5% dividend yield turns into a 39% yield within 12 years.

Financial data publishing firm Mergent releases a list of "Dividend Achievers" each quarter. Stocks with Dividend Achiever status have raised dividends for at least 10 years in a row. Out of 20,000 publicly traded U.S. stocks, around 300 meet the requirement for Dividend Achiever status.

Related Articles

How To Generate High Income From Puny Yields

A Government-Guaranteed 16% Dividend... This Won't Last Long

Dividend Achievers are the perfect stocks to buy in DRIPs. They raise their dividends every year... They tend to be the strongest American businesses with the best franchises, like Johnson & Johnson or Altria... And right now – with the 30% plummet in the Dow in the last 12 months – is a perfect time to buy them for the long term.

You can buy Mergent's list of Dividend Achievers from Amazon. Pick the stocks with the highest 10-year dividend growth, enroll in their DRIPs, and hold them until you retire. The miracle of compound investing – the real secret behind 424 dividend boost plans – requires time. The longer you hold them, the better.

Good investing,

Tom

Editor's note: Tom Dyson is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Tom Dyson.

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NEW HIGHS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

Volatility Index (VIX)... start selling options!

NEW LOWS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

Apple (AAPL)... iPods and computers
Boeing (BA)... airplanes
Cisco (CSCO)... networks
Disney (DIS)... entertainment
Energizer (ENR)... batteries
FedEx (FDX)... shipping
General Motors (GM)... the Chairman was right
Halliburton (HAL)... oil services
IBM (IBM)... technology
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)... health care
Kansas City Southern (KSU)... railroads
Legg Mason (LM)... asset management
McDonald's (MCD)... fast food
Nokia (NOK)... cell phones
Occidental Petroleum (OXY)... oil & gas
Peabody Energy (BTU)... coal mining
Quest Communications (Q)... networks
Royal Caribbean (RCL)... cruise line
Starbucks (SBUX)... coffee
Teck Cominco (TCK)... base metal mining
United Parcel Service (UPS)... shipping
Visa (V)... credit cards
Walgreen (WAL)... drug stores
Xerox (XRX)... technology
Yahoo (YHOO)... search engine
Zimmer Holdings (ZMH)... orthopedic devices
Crude oil, Ethanol, Propane, Uranium, Corn,
Soybeans, Wheat, Copper, Lead, Nickel, Zinc, Cotton

Gold prices jumped higher than $900 a troy ounce [last] Wednesday as investors rushed to the metal's perceived haven status even as central banks around the world cut interest rates in an attempt to restore confidence in the financial system.

The Dubai Gold and Commodities Exchange yesterday said investors in its October gold contract took physical delivery – instead of settling the contract in cash – of a record 908kg of bullion. That contrasts with investors settling primarily in cash in the previous contract, for August, and taking just 15kg of physical delivery.

"It's no longer just gold bugs buying the yellow metal but regular investors and savers rushing for the safety and protection traditionally offered by gold," said Jeffrey Nichols, managing director at American Precious Metal Advisors.

Edel Tully, a strategist at Mitsui Precious Metals, said that the escalating plague that has attacked financial markets did not appear to be responding to its prescribed medication. "We are quite optimistic that gold will see $1,000 once again in the current quarter, and sooner rather than later."

– Financial Times

Emerging-market bonds from Venezuela to Russia tumbled as an escalating global banking crisis led investors to dump riskier assets.

The extra yield investors demand to buy developing-nation debt surged 53 basis points to 5.99 percentage points, the biggest since May 2003, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s EMBI+ index.

A basis point equals 0.01 percentage point. The so-called spread has swelled 1.63 percentage points this week, the most since Russia's debt default in 1998.

– Bloomberg

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