I like investing in close-end funds that pay monthly dividends. The trick is to hold long term and reinvest the monthly dividends plus buy more shares on a monthly basis or when ever you can afford to. This can be easily done because close-end funds are bought and sold on the stock market just like regular stock. That’d be enough to create a portfolio that would pay you between $50k to $70k in dividend income
I agree! That's why it is advisable that you have to invest while you still have a regular job or earning a regular income, and do it constantly. You still need to have something that will keep you going even if you're investing. Good financial planning and money allocation is the key. For a successful long-term strategy you have to seek guidance from a financial advisor.
@@kaylawood9053 As a new investor it's always great to hear from a person who has gone through all the difficult times and come ahead of it. What are some strategies i can employ to be successful?
@@kaylawood9053 I copied her whole name and pasted it into my browser; her website appeared immediately, and her qualifications are excellent; thank you for sharing.
The stock market's dividends motivated me to start investing. What counts, in my opinion, is that you will be able to live off of dividends without selling if you invest and make more money in addition to payouts. It suggests that you can give your children that advantage, giving them a head start in life. I've invested more than $600k throughout the years in dividend stocks; I'm still buying more today and will keep doing so until the price drops even further.
I wholeheartedly concur, which is why I appreciate giving an investment coach the power of decision-making. Given their specialized expertise and education, as well as the fact that each and every one of their skills is centered on harnessing risk for its asymmetrical potential and controlling it as a buffer against certain unfavorable developments, it is practically impossible for them to underperform. I have made over 1.5 million dollars working with an investment coach for more than two years.
@@mikeharry96 There are many financial coaches who excel in their profession, but for the time being, I employ Julie Anne Hoover because I adore her methods. You can make research and find out more.
@@danieljackson87 There are many financial coaches who excel in their profession, but for the time being, I employ Julie Anne Hoover because I adore her methods. You can make research and find out more.
I did my homework on which stocks and ETFs I like for the long run, made a plan for dollar cost averaging for a year and I'm sticking to it, trying not to panic.
Just because there are opportunities in the market doesn’t mean you should go in blindly. To understand the potential factors that contribute to your financial growth, I'll advise you to seek the help of a professional
The best course of action if you lack market knowledge is to ask a consultant or investing coach for guidance or assistance. Speaking with a consultant helped me stay afloat in the market and grow my portfolio to about 65% since January, even though I know it sounds obvious or generic. I believe that’s the most effective way to enter the business at the moment.
Who is the professional who is advising you, if you could perhaps tell us? As a novice investing in stocks without the correct direction of a professional, I have lost a lot of money.
Lisa Angelique Abel is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You'd find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
I like investing in close-end funds that pay monthly dividends. The trick is to hold long term and reinvest the monthly dividends plus buy more shares on a monthly basis or whenever you can afford to. This can be easily done because close-end funds are bought and sold on the stock market just like regular stock. That’d be enough to create a portfolio that would pay you between $50k to $70k in dividend income
Just because there are opportunities in the market doesn’t mean you should go in blindly. To understand the potential factors that contribute to your financial growth, I'll advise you to seek the help of a professional
The best course of action if you lack market knowledge is to ask a consultant or investing coach for guidance or assistance. Speaking with a consultant helped me stay afloat in the market and grow my portfolio to about 65% since January, even though I know it sounds obvious or generic. I believe that’s the most effective way to enter the business at the moment.
Vivian Carol Gioia is my Advis0r. She has since provided entry and exit points on the securities I concentrate on. If you want to check her out, you may do so online. I usually trade in accordance with her strategy.
I just looked her up on the internet and found her webpage with her credentials. I wrote her outlining my financial objectives and planned a call with her.
Investing prospects of a minimal sum of money can be both exhilarating and baseless. With the right approach, there’s a potential for significant wealth growth, Judging by this i'm still in search for suggestions as to a way to improve my retirement portfolio of $580k
Every strategy carries its own set of pros and cons and picking the right one depends on your specific financial goals, but in order to execute such effective decisions, you must be a professional.
Correct. Despite having no prior investing knowledge, I started investing before the pandemic and pulled in a profit of approximately $950k that following year. In reality, all I was doing was getting professional advice
I’m new to all this, heard it's a good time to buy and basically I've just got cash sitting duck in the bank and I’d really love to put it to good use seeing how inflation is at an all time-high, who is this coach that guides you, mind I look them up
My consultant is *Alicia Estela Cabouli* She has since provide entry and exit points on the securities I focus on. You can look her up online if you care for supervision. I basically follow her trade pattern and haven’t regretted doing so
Having been concerned about finances throughout my entire adulthood, it's captivating to observe this video and realize that one can achieve alot if goals are set right. Experiencing the freedom of not being preoccupied with the financial concerns that consumed me for numerous years is truly liberating. I suppose this is the result of putting in diligent effort for the future.
Remarkable observations! Handling and staying abreast of things can be quite daunting for newcomers like myself. Are you a seasoned investor, or do you employ a methodical approach to staying well-informed?
Stacey appears to be really knowledgeable. Her resume, educational history, and qualifications were all quite good when I found her internet page. She will act in my best interests because she is a fiduciary. I thus scheduled a session with her.
The thing to me is, if you invest and have other income outside of dividends then you will be able to live off dividends without selling. Which means you can pass that on to your kids which will give them a leg up in life. $52k dividends received in 2022.
I agree! That's why it is advisable that you have to invest while you still have a regular job or earning a regular income, and do it constantly. You still need to have something that will keep you going even if you're investing. Good financial planning and money allocation is the key.
This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000
When ‘Carol Vivian Constable’ is trading, there's no nonsense and no excuses. She wins the trade and you win. Take the loss, I promise she'll take one with you.
I would think that a major benefit of dividend investing is that calculating portfolio size needed is not relevant. We don't care about the value of the portfolio. We care about the sustainable income it pays. As you invest you can gradually see the income rise as you invest more and pull the retirement trigger when it's high enough regardless of the market sentiment.
by calculating how much additional income the contributions produce and estimating how that income rises. the capital value will fluctuate up and down over time so the amount of income new additions give you varies. so capital value being high with a market yielding 2% is no worse for retirement than the same portfolio at a different timepoints where the capital value is half and so the yield is 4%. so long as the yield is sustainable in real terms the capital value being half does not matter. its the same income stream at a different moment of low market sentiment vs high market sentiment.
Although there are many of chances in the financial markets, I've learnt enough over the previous few years to be skeptical about that. Knowing where to focus is crucial. When I started properly monitoring my investments, I started to amass riches. The importance of professional mentoring cannot be understated. Without the right coaching, people are more likely to make errors and lose money.
Who is the professional who is advising you, if you could perhaps tell us? As a novice investing in stocks without the correct direction of a professional, I have lost a lot of money.
Catherine Morrison Evans, is the coach that guides me, you probably might have come across her before I found her through a Newsweek report. She's quite known in her field, look her up online.
Dividends from the stock market encouraged me to begin investing. What matters, in my opinion, is that if you invest and make additional money in addition to dividends, you will be able to live off of dividends without selling. It implies that you can provide that benefit for your children, giving them a head start in life. I've invested more than $600K in dividend stocks throughout the years; I'm currently buying more today and will continue to do so until the price falls even further.
I greatly appreciate it. I'm fortunate to have come upon your message because investing greatly fascinates me. I'll look her up and send her a message. You've truly motivated me. God's blessings on you
Dividends are a great thing, but they’re only really effective for passive income when you either have somewheres over 20 to 25 thousand shares of a high yielding stock. Meaning you likely need to have a few hundred thousand if not more invested in it. Re-investing dividends back into the same stock certainly does snowball with compound interest, but you only really start seeing it after 20 years of never stopping and likely needing to add additional money of your own with it….so it’ll be time consuming and costly. The way I see it if you have a million dollars at some point, that’d be enough to create a portfolio that would pay you between 50 to 70 thousand in dividend income
Like Warren Buffet said, dividends are only good if the business you’re investing into can’t make good use of that capital. So if you’re trying to invest into businesses with actual growth, looking at dividends is a waste of time. Why are you investing into a company if they’re returning capital to you because they think you can make better use if it than they can. There’s only one reason, and it is a place to park your capital to pay you a small return with large established businesses because you aren’t trying to grow your portfolio anymore, but to live off of it. It’s not much different from bond investing.
Don't depend your market assessments and decisions on hearsay and rumors; I did it in 2020 and ended up with worthless market holdings. Before I started noticing any notable improvements in my portfolio, Helene and I had to completely rebuild it. I've been using the same advisor ever then, and in just two years I've scaled up to $876k. Depending on where you look, a bullish or down market might both produce good profits.
Thats a good one. I know a lot of folks that made fortunes from the Dotcom crash as well as the 08’ crash and I’ve been looking into similar opportunities in this present market. Could this coach that guides you help?
She should. Having a counselor is quite imperative for portfolio diversification. My advisor is ''Helene Claire Johnson''. She is easily looked up and has extensive knowledge of the financial markets.
In spite of how everyone is frightened and calling the crash, there is already an excessive amount of demand waiting to absorb it, which is another reason it's less likely to happen that way. This forecast was not made in 2008, at least not by the general public, as I will explain below. The ownership rate peaked in 2004, according to the other comment. We reached a peak in the second quarter of 2020 and are currently at the median level. From 2008 to 2012, it fell by 3%, and in the second quarter of 2020, it dropped from 68 to 65.
@@tatianastarcic My portfolio has been in the gutter for the entire year, so I started researching new ways to profit in the market, but everything I tried just seemed to miss the mark. Please let us know the name of your financial advisor.
@@tatianastarcic Thank you for this tip. it was easy to find your coach. Did my due diligence on her before scheduling a phone call with her. She seems proficient considering her résumé.
Nobody can become financially successful over night. They put in background work but we tend to see the finished part. Fear is a dangerous component, hindering us from taking bold steps we need in other to reach our goals.
@rachealhubert74 Alice Marie Coraggio her trading strategies is working for me for more than a year now and I’m making good profit from the stock market and she's 100% honest, reputable and trustworthy
The most important thing that should be on everyone's mind currently should be to invest in different sources of income that doesn't depend on the government. Especially with the current economic crisis around the word. This is still a good time to invest in various stocks, Gold, silver and digital currencies.
The Market have been suffering over the past month, with all the three indexes recording losses in recent weeks. My $400,000 portfolio is down by approximately 20%, any recommendations to scale up my returns before retirement will be highly appreciated.
Find stocks with market-beating yields and shares that at least keep pace with the market for a long term. For a successful long-term strategy I recommend you seek the guidance a broker or financial advisor.
Very true , I diversified my $400K portfolio across multiple market with the aid of an investment advisor, I have been able to generate over $900k in net profit across high dividend yield stocks, ETF and bonds in few months.
You can do your research and be on the lookout for one with intelligent strategies who'll help your portfolio maintain an unwavering and a progressive growth. Diana Luise Hines is my FA. She has the Flexibility & Expertise to Meet Your Needs. Verify her yourself
My dividend journey began when I realized that two particular expenses in my budget were always going to go up and never go down. The two expenses were taxes and insurance. I realized that the dramatic rise in both will need some added income. So, I started buying shares paying dividends. I can now see that this will be the path I need to take to make sure those two expenses will not overtake my future income.
As a beginner, educate yourself, Learn the basics of investing and the stock market. There are many resources available online, including books, articles, and online courses. It’s a good idea to diversify your portfolio across different stocks and sectors to minimize risk. I’ve heard of people accruing over $550k during recessions and inflation, its important to do your own research.
I wholeheartedly concur, which is why I appreciate giving an investment coach the power of decision-making. Given their specialised expertise and education, as well as the fact that each and every one of their skills is centred on harnessing risk for its asymmetrical potential and controlling it as a buffer against certain unfavourable developments, it is practically impossible for them to underperform. I have made over 1.5 million dollars working with an investment coach for more than two years.
There are many financial coaches who excel in their profession, but for the time being, I employ Helene Claire Johnson because I adore her methods. You can make research and find out more
I greatly appreciate it. I'm fortunate to have come upon your message because investing greatly fascinates me. I'll look her up and send her a message. You've truly motivated me. God's blessings on you
Dividends are what you need them to be...if it's to use it so that you can work part time...so be it. For others it's retirement....for other, it's just to have their bills paid every month even if they are not retired. There is no official rule, it's whatever floats your boat which is why I agree with what you said.
"Buying a stock is easy, but buying the right stock without a time-tested strategy is incredibly hard. Hence what are the best stocks to buy now or put on a watchlist? I’ve been trying to grow my portfolio of $260K for sometime now, my major challenge is not knowing the best entry and exit strategies... I would greatly appreciate any suggestions.
With markets tumbling, inflation soaring, the Fed imposing large interest-rate hike, while treasury yields are rising rapidly-which means more red ink for portfolios this quarter. How can I profit from the current volatile market, I'm still at a crossroads deciding if to liquidate my $125,000 bond/stock portfolio.
Focus on two key objectives. First, stay protected by learning when to sell stocks to cut losses and capture profits. Second, prepare to profit when the market turns around. I recommend you seek the guidance a broker or financial advisor.
I’ve set my kid up. Every investment I make, I mimic for her. She’s going to have a huge jumpstart when she reaches adulthood and I hand over control of her portfolio. I’ll never be able to live off my dividends. But she will. And when I’m too old to care about my portfolio, I’ll merge it into hers. And that’s what it’s all about in the end right? Set the next generation up to be better than what you were.
@@hades9189 drug abuse is not funny. to fuel a coke addiction u will need between 600-2400 dollars a month. just for drugs!! might be even more if u stay up all night on coke.. u rly want this for his daughter??
Is there anything like proof recession stock? I am 58 years and would like help in managing my retirement portfolio which is currently $1.25M...down from a high of $1.67M….
Very true! I've been able to scale from $350K to $650K this red season because my FA figured out Defensive strategies to protect my portfolio and profit from this roller coaster market.
I started investing because I liked the extra money from stock dividends. The key, in my opinion, is to make enough money through both investing and dividends, so you can live off the dividends without selling anything. This way, you might pass on this financial advantage to your kids. I've put more than $600K into dividend stocks over the years, and I'm still buying more, planning to keep going until prices drop more.
Hearing from an experienced investor who has survived the crisis and prospered is always comforting. It could be worrisome when your portfolio goes from green to red, but if you have invested in strong firms, you should just keep growing them and stick to your goal.
Uncertainty... it took me 5 years to stop trying to predict what’s about to happen in market based on charts studying, cause you never know. not having a mentor cost me 5 years of pain I learn to go we’re the market is wanting to go and keep it simple with discipline.
Is it a good time to buy stocks right now? How long will it take for us to recover? I know everyone claims that equities are now inexpensive. Although there are tactics to be applied in this market, the common person cannot access these strategies. Would I be better off investing my money somewhere else?
If the market has taught me anything, it's that it usually bounces back, but I can't seem to concentrate on the long term, especially because important variables like my retirement and my reserve are having a disastrous impact on inflation. I need a reliable data trajectory as well as a solution as soon as feasible.
@@joesphcu8975 Due to the significant falls, I need advice on how to rebuild my portfolio and develop more successful tactics. Where can I find this teacher?
I can see why She is so busy; her career and outstanding qualifications are Fascinating! So I immediately copied Eileen's complete name and pasted it into my browser.
Investing in alternative income streams that are independent of the government should be the top priority for everyone right now. especially given the global economic crisis we are currently experiencing. Stocks, gold, silver, and virtual currencies are still attractive investments at the moment.
@Jake Farmers Jennifer really seem to know her stuff. I found her website, read through her resume, educational background, qualifications and it was really impressive. She is a fiduciary who will act in my best interest. So, I booked a session with her
@@veniceblackwood2931 any idea how i can go from pretty much broke living check by check to living off of 50k a month. idk if your meaning you had 350k to 650k a month or something. but if so id like to know how to get there pretty quick. may have to tell that mountain to be flat or move out the way.
I entirely agree that now is an ideal time to capitalize on the market for long-term gains, but it wouldn't hurt to know how to make short-term profit. I've heard of investors making over $400k profit in this current sinking market, and I'm looking for ideas on how to earn similar profits.
The market is volatile at this time, hence i will suggest you get yourself a financial-advisor that can provide you with entry and exit points on the shares/ETF you focus on.
very true, I started investing before the pandemic and that same year I pulled a profit of about $600k with no prior investing experience, basically all I was doing was seeking guidance from a financial-advisorr, you can be passively involved with the aid of a professional.
Hi Matthew, Do you mind sharing info on the adviser who assisted you? been saving for pension since age 18 - company scheme. along the way I hit higher tax, so I added to my company pension with a SIPP (tax benefits) I'm 50 now and would love to grow my finance more aggressively, there are a few cars I still wish to drive, a few mega holidays, etc.
@@ThomasHeintz Elise Marie Terry is my portfolio-coach, I found her on Bloomberg where she was featured, I looked up her name on the internet. Fortunately I came across her site and reached out to her, you can verify her yourself.
@@Adukwulukman859 Thank you for this tip. it was easy to find your coach. Did my due diligence on her before scheduling a phone call with her. She seems proficient considering her résumé.
According to certain economists, it's possible that the U.S. and certain parts of Europe might experience a recession at some point in 2023. Although a global recession, which is characterized by a decline in annual global per capita income, is relatively uncommon due to the faster growth rates of emerging markets like China, in comparison to developed economies. I have pulled out more than $340k from my bank. After all, the FDIC covers only up to $250,000, and the implosion could have bad effect. Looking to invest into the stock market now. Does anyone know how I could go about it?
We must consider safer investments with promising returns in order to plan for the future. If you approach investing with a five-year perspective and simply DCA whenever you receive a check. Under the direction of my investment advisor, "Deborah Sue Bohn", whose expertise in portfolio diversification is unsurpassed and client-focused, my portfolio has gained almost $643k since January 2022.
It is actually easy, dump money in solid dividend companies isn’t hard, the real problem is that most of that youtubers make their money from UA-cam and not dividends, that’s the reason their portfolios are always over six figures. Dividend investing is a generational strategy, that’s the way I see it, at least 20 years to see results.
@Mike T no most vids I see try to hype the shit out of dividends and make it look super easy to accumulate thousands of dollars in dividend investing. The problem is they are making several thousand dollars a month through UA-cam so can afford to invest 2-5k a month easy some of them. This strategy is unrealistic for the vast majority of people. The younger you are it's better to invest in growth and value stocks with high long term growth potential.
@@connordutton674 Can you put $200-$500 in stocks each month? Maybe reduce an expense you don't really need? I'm not that well off and put $500 a month into stocks. It's not that hard but the hard part is seeing it grow so slow for the first few years.. Have patience and do research.
@@MrLaughingcorpse not everyone can afford to do that. Even if I reduce all my expenses I still won't be able to take out $500 monthly for investing. However I'm separating about $250 for that, it's all I can do for now.
One of the best content I’ve seen. stock is the best though I don’t self trade but I still make my profit with the help of my broker till I'm sure I can start of self trading.
@@theresagarcia1218 My personal broker/investment manager is 'PRISCILLA DIANE AIVAZIAN", she runs a stock investment platform where you don't have to undergo any stress in the trades, she manages my account and all I need to do is invest capital and she gets a tiny bit of my returns as her commission. Just look with her name online, she can help you get started.
@@godtrader6102 Yes, albeit with a better return on investment because there's usually some sort of capital growth involved rather than just whatever interest rates the Fed will allow.
Just because a stock is going up doesn’t mean it’s a good investment. just because a stock is going down doesn’t mean it’s a bad investment. theres more to a stock than just its stock price. An entire company more. focus on the company, not just the stock price. true words from my F.A Jane Marie Kunak...i made over half a million from ALB and NVDA
JNJ has also tripled its stock value in the last 20 years, Dividend investing is not just about dividends, you must also look at the appreciation of the underlining stock, 2% yield is not so bad if the stock is also appreciating at 6 to 8% each year
QYLD is decent for retired people who just want income, but not great for younger investors. Lets say we put $10,000 into Johnson and Johnson, and the same into QYLD in 2014-today. While the QYLD dividend would still be just over 3 times the Johnson and Johnson the J&J portfolio is still worth more overall. (22,659 in J&J to 18,231 in QYLD). It really just depends on your living situation.
We should focus on creating passive income source like dividend income so that we can live decent life after retirement. So that we are not dependent on anyone during age when we don't have any other income source with us. Dividend income if not able to give us any happiness but atleast it will make sure that we don't live in financial pain in retirement life.
Thats why I invest in OKE, at .93c dividend a share at 50.86 a share, a much better payout, which amounts at 10K to about 200$ every 3 months, this is just one stock in my portfolio
Made my first £200 k from buying ETFs and startup company’s Stocks over a year, I was able to generate good ROi monthly after tax most thanks that my portfolio is managed by one of the best fiduciary sir Arlo Eric and ever since it’s been a great source of income for short and long term
If you are done with all the research that needed to convince you to start investing, then you should not hesitate and take a leap into the investment industry. However, you must understand that just having sufficient money is a solid requirement for you to make investments in the right places and things
I have been selling covered calls for 2 years now. J&J has been one that I was gifted by parents. They love dividend stock. When I learned about covered calls and found out that 80% of call expire worthless. I wanted to be on the seller side. On $300,000 it is possible to earn $1500 to $2000 A week. I sell a call way out of the money so I rarely get called. If I do I usually earn an added 8% per week return PER WEEK. I am now working on a You tube channel to share this with others. I love how you do not do this from a nice studio which I dont have. Have a geart day and thanks for this video. Bill
I'm both a dividend and growth investor! the trick is to diversify enough to where you actually get good dividend payments Monthly. I made my first million from repositioning my stocks using a full service broker so i invested and re-invested my dividend profits...
Both of these comments are so important. Many people make the mistake of thinking we’re an individualist society, but it’s more accurate to say we’re a family society. Many people make money to give their kids a better future, and as the old saying goes, the ideal society is one where men plant the seeds to trees they may never live to see grow. But often the best gift you can give someone is instilling a work ethic, gratitude, and providing challenges to overcome.
History teaches us that a crash is inevitable. My spouse and I are adding a variety of stocks/ETF to our present holdings and we've set asides a good amount to start following inflation-indexed bonds and stocks of companies with solid cash flows. I believe it is a good time to capitalize on the market for long-term gains, but it wouldn't hurt to know means of actualizing short term profits as well. I have approximately $750k stagnant in my port_folio that needs growth.
Make your diligent research. 08' 2020' 2022' all even years! the bigger risk now is not inflation, it's deflation. I'd suggest you get yourself a portfolio-coach that can provide you with entry and exit points on the assets you focus on.
@@svengrot7943 Right. I'm sure the idea of a coach sounds controversial to a few, but new study by investopedia found that demand for investment coaching sky-rocketed over 41% since the rona-outbreak till date. Based on firsthand encounter I can say for certain, their skillsets are top notch, I've built a solid 4 years+ working relationship with my coach, gaining rare but useful insights and after subsequent investing, accruing approx. $1.75m in savings thus far.
@Nixon McGovern I have saved myself from all the hassle that chaotic market causes. These days the best way to come into the market space is reading, studying, patience and seeking guidance when necessary, due to my line of work i can’t handle my portfolio so i just copy the trades of ‘' Theresa Mary Chamblee” a CFA I saw on Bloomberg business news. It’s been smooth since then.
What I do is invest into ETFs and blue chip stocks but I sometimes focus on ETFs that mirror the performance of a major index like the S&P 500 for good ROI monthly and long term
I once dabbled in stocks and bought shares worth 9k but was growing slowly and learnt to understand the higher the investment the higher returns plus I lack the skill
@@jidaloida106 I use the service of a fiduciary under a great broker, that is the most effective way I have known, Look up the name Benjamin ravies, that's the name of my fiduciary he trades the market for me with his expertise while I earn he charges commission on profits
This is a good video but I can’t get on board with this QYLD advice. QYLD has never recovered from the 2018 decline, nor the 2020 crash, and will not recover from the 2022 bear market. It offers an 11% distribution but typically loses value each year with no prospect of recovery because of its ATM covered call model. QQQX is a better choice, and it’s what I switched too.
Bear market . Euphemism of the century. I know, it hasn't happened yet, but we won't look back on this year and talk about the bear market... tread carefully in this market and hold cash, physical metal. If the contrived cyber attack they'll pin on the big bad east scapegoats goes as planned, well see brokerages and banks wiped clean and sorry , FDIC and the crooked DTCC aren't compensating anything. The criminals at the top are facing a lot of financial issues. Don't think they haven't collaborated I mean colluded to protect their own. The amount of short selling in the market that's gone unchecked with only pretend investigations by DOJ and SEC alone would cost in the trillions to clear up. Don't take my word for it though. Just watch it because the rules have changed
Actually, if you do the math, you want a high but stable dividend regardless of stock price and low or negative stock price growth, exactly like QYLD to maximize your value IF YOU ARE REINVESTING DIVIDENDS. I made a spreadsheet and showed that even at a flat stock price and flat average dividend for QYLD (using the last 5 years average) QYLD outperformed a dividend growth stock with INCREASING stock value (even at 4% a year) with the same returns % as QYLD (which you can't get). QYLD grows your money faster and generates more dividend income than the alternative with little risk due to the ability to buy more shares because the price isn't increasing. And the higher you grow your dividend amount to each month, the faster it all snowballs.
@@michaelrudolph7003 if you were getting QYLD’s dividend with a flat stock price, it would be a wonderful investment. But unfortunately the stock doesn’t seem to show an ability to stay flat or increase. It just keeps going down over time. On my channel, I have a video showing QQQX vs QYLD. QQQX wins since 2013 with or without dividend reinvestment.
@@michaelrudolph7003 I missed out , no , not missed , I screwed up 2 killer dividend plays in the last month. ONTKR ontrak and OP oceans pal inc. 🤦🏽♂️ I had ontrak for less than $5 it had a guaranteed payout of over $2 per share, shares have jumped to $10.50 since EDD in Feb. I wasnt thinking clearly and cleaned it out balancing the portfolio profits, and OP ex div date was today- guaranteed .20¢ per share per year at share price of .77¢ but I forgot until your comment reminded me . I love playing with compound interest calculators though...I have a crypto stake that's around 23% right now, i dont expect it to be sustainable but I'm riding it while it's there, if I can pull 4 years off out if it ....🤞🏼🤞🏼
Thanks for keeping it real with us. (For the average person, it’s nearly impossible.) people need to hear that because you tubers, etc make it sound like a cake walk.
I just found out that "cake walk" (seemingly so innocent) has a very unpleasant origin. Just sharing that in case you didn't know. No judgement. Take care
I watch gen x dividend investor and dividend bull between both you get great dividend stocks insight but with gen x he's the most transparent and breaks the company and dividend percentage possible if that alone doesn't help find out what company to go with im not sure what else would and it gives you a direction and shows what works and how many to obtain a nice return happy investing 🍻
my whole thing is i don't want to NOT work. I just want to work full time and still be able to do things like go to the dentist, get a car, and travel without either losing my job or saving for two or three years.
About the car: Please watch a few videos by Scotty Kilmer. Know what brands have the best track records for reliability, etc. Hint: Honda and Toyota. Don't buy new. Make sure that make and model doesn't have a flaws(s) right off the line. I get cars 15-20 ears old. Have the fluids changed, replace the battery with a rebuilt one, then drive for 6-8 years. Most times,, they eventually throw a part. If it's a starter, or alternator, u can replace for around $50....4 bolts and 2 wires. If it's more complicated, I give them to my son, who does the replacement and drives or resells. He also gifts these nice older cars to young ppl he knows who need wheels, and teaches any who are interested how to replace a part.
@@staceykersting705 i really appreciate that response, thank you. when i have the money for my next car, i will definitely be referring to scott's videos. and tell your son if he gets the urge to gift a car again, there's a 26 year old in bloomington illinois who would love one lol!
@@nutbastard crazy that's your reaction to me wanting things the 'average' american gets to have. i know people in other countries have it worse, but i'm already here. if there's gonna be this pretense that if you're an American you get to have a healthy body and access to amenities like a used car and some unpaid time off from work, i would like to have that. i work 40-50 hours a week, exercise, cook all my own food and pay all my own bills. i help people in need and perform my other duties as a contributing member to this society. just saying that it would be nice to get what average people get. your cynicism is super washed out and overplayed man
The problem we have is because Most people always taught that " you only need a good job to become rich " . These billionaires are operating on a whole other playbook that many don't even know exists.
The wisest thing that should be on everyone mind currently should be to invest in different streams of income that doesn't depend on government paycheck, especially with the current economic crisis around the world. This is still a time to invest in Stocks, Forex and Digital currencies.
The wisest thing that should be on everyone mind currently should be to invest in different streams of income that doesn't depend on government paycheck, especially with the current economic crisis around the world. This is still a time to invest in Stocks, Forex and Digital currencies.
I also keep seeing lot's of people testifying about how they make money investing in Stock, Forex and Crypto Trade(Bitcoin) and I wonder why I keep loosing. Can anyone help me out or at least advice me on what to do.
Even with the right technique and assets some investors would still make more than others. As an investor, you should've known that by now that nothing beats experience and that's final. Personally I had to reach out to a stock expert for guidance which is how I was able to grow my account close to $35k, withdraw my profit right before the correction and now I'm buying again.
A two year track record is deceptive. Consider options are worth more when volatility is high and calls do better when stocks are booming. This will make those perform wildly differently over the years. Not necessarily bad, just be aware
Yep, these days with robo-investors the returns you're looking at here aren't that much better than what you'd get from just having the funds invested in a balance of stocks and bonds both foreign and domestic.
Yeah, there could be some real bad results in a bear or volatile market. It's a young etc and no experience with that because we've been in a decade long bull run...
@@kodomo1418 why wouldnt it be big? literally the stock market has always gone up the entire time it has existed. long as you dont paper hand the crashes, if you invest long term you will always be up.
Normally during this time of year, we see certain stocks rise in the market, but that is very unlikely this season due to the recession and overall economic crisis. The issue is that I've been holding a lot of stocks hoping to sell for profit this month, but I'm not sure if I should keep holding or sell, I've been running at a loss since Q2 and 2023 is not looking promising for investors. The market hasn't looked good since COVID, and it's only going to get worse by 2023; you should sell.
Because the market will continue to fall, I advise you to conduct a critical analysis of the companies you own and their data projections for the next few years. Even better, you could have an investment adviser assist you in restructure your overall portfolio and offset the bad apples you're holding; that strategy has worked for me so far, saving me a lot of stress and anxiety, and it's also very time efficient.
@@xionglu9183 I’ve honestly been considering going the route of an advisor, this current market is no jokes for the average retail investor, but do these advisors really make any notable changes to a portfolio or am I better off on my own.
@@lloydthomas1946 Unless you plan to buy and hold stocks for a decade, which I don't see why you wouldn't, I've been investing closely with an investment adviser for the past two years and have pulled in over $850K in net gains, and I'm not concerned about where we're headed this year because I know I'm in good hands.
@@michealjohnsons9910 Very well said; could you recommend the coach who is guiding you? I'm only a beginner, and I've had a bad experience since last year
@@michealjohnsons9910 I simply typed her name into Google to find her website. So far, it appears intriguing. I'll call her on the agreed-upon date and let you know how it went. Thanks
Thank you for being the first investment video to use realistic numbers. All the other videos out there assume everyone starts out investing with 300k in savings🤦🏼♂️.
I have brought JNJ in the 90's for $ 42.00 a share and I have 1279 shares and yes they do give me a great drip. but I do need to think about splinting it though because it has gotten too big . in enjoy the work you did on jnj.
Did about exactly the same thing. Same kind of numbers on JNJ. My suggestion is don't sell, but use the dividends to invest in something else paying a bigger yield. That is what I do. Otherwise, you are going to pay a miserable cap gains tax.
@@leagueplays2100 Compound interest calcs that I've played with all work on a quarterly compound not a monthly. Monthly should have a different curve then a quarterly.
@@roamingcelt Do the spreadsheet (seriously, it is easy and you don't have to rely of some silly you tuber for your info). It matters, but not much. Generally if you express your interest rate as an annual rate of return you are then comparing apples to apples.
This was an awesome video and with me only being 19 years old 90% of every paycheck I get from here on out goes straight into a Dividend fund with the option selected to reinvest my dividends
As a 41 year old, I attempted to do the same thing beginning in my late teens. I stayed the course through college, and for a few years after college. However, having a family makes it very challenging. Do your best to stick to your plan. Even if the investment percentage can't always be 90%, keep it as high as possible. I wish I had. You have an excellent plan, and I wish you all the best with achieving it. The outcome WILL be worth it.
@@lukew9036 how the hell can anyone save 90% of their paycheck? Are they earning like 20k a month or something? Are they not pay for food, taxes, transportation or accommodation?
@@comedyman112 Being a teen, living with parents that dont ask you to pay for anything. Only eat out once a month or so. If your work allows it get a public transportation pass thing to ride them for nearly free (its like 60€/year or so here if you are a teen. So this is cheap af). Having no car means no gas/repair costs... Having a hobby that doesnt cost much also helps. Like learning to code games and apps is literally free (besides the need of a device capable to run/write the code. Which can already be done from a raspberry pi for 40€~ if you dont need fancy graphics.)
@@GamesPlayer1337 i'm 29 atm, with a gf, not having to pay rent, owning a car, going on short trips 2-3 times a year. i guess it's doable if you're a teen. not so much at my age, just waiting to get married and have children soon
I think no matter what, dividend investments are only good once you reach the finish line. If you start with $10,000 today, you are much better off investing into normal growth index funds or ETF’s to accumulate wealth for down the road. Then once the wealth has accumulated, you move it over to dividends and get the monthly or quarterly payouts. Going straight into dividends is going to leave you missing out on a ton of profits. I did still learn something in this video, and that was the covered calls ETF’s, I never knew those existed and an 11% dividend is sweet.
How do you think about those now, since most of them are down 20-40% since you wrote that comment. I'm not asking to mock you, but more interested in if what you learned by now would you buy more now or think it will get worse ?
Thank you. Very informative. I’m getting around $21 a month from dividends and really need to do something better than 2%. I don’t have forty years left in me! I retired six months ago and am trying to live off SS. Tough! I will look at those you suggested. Thank you.
Pretty much. Clear $100k yearly on dividends. Make cost effective decisions, and reinvest the expendable income into higher risk trades, and either open franchises or conquer real estate with competent property management looking after your investment. Start with trailers, then houses, apartments, then hotels. Maybe buy up majority shareholder in a growing business, and be on the ground floor with logistics. Never stop. Pass the moon. We're flying out of the solar system!
@@moneyguy2008 Not to sound rude, but how do you have so little money saved up? Do you have money in other investments or do you live paycheck to paycheck?
My goal is similar: to live off dividends. But I learned early on that my capital would never get there by investing in dividend paying stocks now. Instead, I now focus on growth/value stocks to grow my capital as much as possible. I don't need to live off the dividends at the moment so that income isn't relevant. Growing my capital as much as possible will allow me to sell those stocks and buy high paying dividend stocks when I am ready to retire. In other words, what does a 4-12% yield mean to me now when my capital is low? I'd rather see growth returns of +10% each year until my capital is large enough that I could retire and live off a 4% dividend yield. Edit: this is not financial advice. Just my own personal perspective and strategy.
@Tom ! I took the same approach. I dropped all my dividend paying stocks and ETF’s over a year ago and invested in high growth and value stocks. Im currently only yielding .0056% in dividend income right now on my portfolio but im up 112% in stock price from a year ago. Once im ready for monthly income through dividends i can sell all my massively appreciated growth and value stocks and get back to regular distributions of dividends. Funny that he mentioned QYLD in the video. That .0056% im earning now is from that ETF. Its only 1% of my total portfolio, i just couldn't part ways with it when i sold all my other dividend paying stocks and ETF’s 😅
True but more risk with growth shares then dividend shares. I understand u points, very good one but more risk. U can do 60% dividend and 40% growth shares and keep reinvesting the dividend in the market to increase compound annj growth rate.
I'm starting out investing by putting all my money in dividend growing stocks and ETFs, 10% dividends and over. Yes, you get taxed on the dividends as income, but I think starting out you have more of a mental advantage when you start seeing more money coming in the more you invest. Makes you want to invest even more. My idea is that I want the additional income to reinvest and give me the motivation to keep investing. And it helps my income so I don't get into a credit card trap and if I lose my job I can at least pay some or all of the bills. Once I get that dividend snowball really rolling I'll switch gears and use the majority to then invest in long term growth stocks. Most people starting out are struggling to pay the bills, no way they are going to blindly give their money away never to be seen again for 30 years. I think that's what keeps most people from investing.
Tesla is a dumpster fire that will implode along w Musk. It hasn’t ever delivered on a product promise. It won’t last ,much longer but it’s decent for riding the “ old white mans feelings” wave if you want to pick a high point to cash out
Good advice. I'm not that young and just started April last year. (for obvious reasons) Already at almost 10k invested making $50 a month off dividends. (6% yield) Dividend investing is extremely slow going at first. I'm not planning to live off it per say but just supplement my retirement with it. And all my 13 stocks are not high risk. I do detailed researching.
Only making $50/mo off $10k? I'm making about $130/mo off $6700... ;) Granted, I'm in a few riskier stocks that'll probably capital depreciate a bit over time (and, likely USOI will dry up as oil stabilizes; OILK already stopped giving dividends a month ago, which was annoying), but I'm running the dividends plus extra contributions into some other lower yield "cap/div growers" to compensate... We'll see how it works out in the long run. Just rolled OILK sell-off proceeds over into PSEC, PFLT, GAIN, and bulking up a couple other positions by a share or two each. Anyway, they should be some decent monthly/quarterly income sources, to roll into other things and "snowball" over time. Gonna' start working the other play, and try to slowly build up certain monthly positions to 100 shares/ea, then drip the proceeds into either bulking those positions, or buying into new positions and bulking those up to 100 shares/ea. Will probably start from the bottom (cheap monthly dividend earners) and work my way up (slightly more expensive dividend earners, offset by the dividends from the cheaper stocks)... We'll see how it works and if it helps accelerate getting more and more tickers up to the 100 shares/ea threshold over time...
@@MGmirkin I'm actually up to $78 a month off $11,000 invested but yeah tried to stay somewhat safe. Talked to a lot of other youtube investors and they thought 10% yield or above was just crazy. I'm at 8.59%.
My concern with ETF's like QYLD is that they haven't been tested under a prolonged bear market before, so there is that risk that you could lose your principle fast if it fails under those conditions. In fact, since inception in 2014 it's share value has been on a slow but steady decline. I know the point of it is the large dividend payout quickly, but remember your dividends naturally rise as share price increases (mostly) and when your shares rise your portfolio value rises and you don't have to pay taxes on that growth unless you sell, where as with dividends, even if reinvesting right away, you pay taxes. I do appreciate alternatives so great video, but if you are long term thinker, a combination of share value growth + healthy dividend reinvestment = more hard liquid dollars in the end with less risk. Perhaps short term, just to get the dividend money QYLD is great. My suggestion is just to hold the shares with a stop loss put in place at all times.
Qyld raises divedend payments when down. I have seen it hit 16% and come back to 11% as it recovers. So unless you need that capitol which you should avoid qyld if you ever plan to sell as you will lose principal and gain alot of fun tax stuff
You only lose your principle if you sell and lock in your loss, or QYLD goes bust. The stock market goes up and down, and you are not guaranteed to make money.
@@BuceGar - In the past QYLD has never returned back to previous highs even after the market recovered from a dip, which is why I am worried about it long term. So I think you are missing my mathematical point. QYLD has failed to maintain its base value even during the Bull market & in the this long term possibility -- having accumulated thousands and thousands of shares from DRIP that are eventually worth almost nothing because the share price is no < $1 -- it won't matter if it pays 100% dividends at that point.
@@Emp6ft10in Your claim remains to be seen. QYLD isn't meant to gain in value, it's basically an annuity with a ticker symbol. If QYLD goes bust or is ever shut down, then your claim will be correct. It may also regain it's value when the Nasdaq recovers, it remains to be seen.
Think of QYLD like a piece of rental equipment…you pay $100 for it and it pays you $5 a month back. As long as it keeps running your getting $5 a month so do you care what it’s worth after 5 years? No you don’t as long as it keeps paying that dividend. Re-investing is like buying more equipment.
So basically, if you already have more then enough money then you know what to do with, dividends may be great but it doesn't really matter because you already have enough money then you know what to do with.
You can live off $1m and that's far from more money than you know what to do with. You can easily spend that in 5-10 years and if you are not dead by then you're fucked.
Unfortunately, the all-time (~8 year) chart of QYLD goes from the upper left to the lower right. That high yield comes at a cost.... there are no free lunches.
Yes. These kind of products are suited best for investors that want to diburse their investissement at the end of their career without loosing exposure to dividends
@@bobfred73 @joshua Vincent a few places to try: tradingview, yahoo finance, tdameritrade. Not sure what site you are using, but I see that some places like seekingalpha only go back 2 years.
What this video misses to address is that lower yielding stocks also increase stock price at a more rapid rate. Jnj increased value 2.7X thats the tradeoff. At some point you can go with higher yielding and sale jnj for some other higher yielding stocks. Qyld, reits or bdc wont see near as much growth as jnj or other lower tielding stocks.
Ever wonder why none of these financial channels talk about how these are all taxed? Very important to everyone to look at the tax side of this. I am not a financial person so don’t ask me. But ask a tax advisor exactly how each one of these stocks are taxed or how they will effect your current tax circumstances.
Well, it’s income, so it’s taxed like income. In a later life scenario, you would ideally be working much less, so you would be in a lower tax bracket... if you are making 5000k a month between work and investment income, you would be in a lower tax bracket than you were when you were in your prime earning years.
All stock Capital gains aren’t treated equal. It also depends on if your stocks are in tax sheltered portfolios or taxable accounts. This is why I say talk with a professional.
@@naturescritter4691 Capital gains from stock is not the same thing as the “capital gains tax”. If you collect $100 a month in dividends, and then one of your stocks pays you 200 in capital gains at the end of the year, it’s all taxed at the same rate. Pretty sure Capital gains tax is levied when you make over a certain amount of money in a year (500k for a couple?)... but definitely talk to a tax professional.
Ahh yes, and A K-1 tax form is also taxed differently… and long term capital gains are different, and being part of a BDC could effect your taxes differently. And different states tax differently. Just makes me wonder why I would say that it is “Very important to everyone to look at the tax side of this.”
@@naturescritter4691 my mistake, I didn’t realize you posted a public comment on UA-cam because you wanted to have a conversation with yourself. My bad!
I look for dividend stocks that have a lower price and pay 10% or more. That way after owning 10 shares of a stock, I can buy a share with that stock. This is my retirement plan and I’m doing it for the long run.
ARCC and NEWT got absolutely murdered in the 2007-2009 financial crisis. 85% drop for ARCC and over 95% for NEWT. No thanks. I love the content you provide though. Great video!
I think you need to look for investments with growth that also have some level of dividend. My suggestions to consider would be RIO , ABR , PFE , SCHD , MS , JNJ , CM , RY , TD , BMO these are my top suggestions if looking for both strong Dividends & Growth that cover the sectors Minerals, Health , Finance & Real Estate
Takes alot of money to get these stocks! I've started with large ones but only bought a few select because that's how I was being taught to build my portfolio. Now I see there was possibly an easier less wallet draining way to accomplish this!
Am I missing something, or aren't there several high dividend yield ETFs that offer 6-10% like $SDIV at 7.25%? Every time I see people talking about dividend investing it's always the same 2-4% individual stocks.
It's because stocks like JNJ, KO, and MMM's stock prices rise with dividend. If you do the math, during 2017 jnj rose ~$33 while SDIV rose ~$1. Only looking at dividends numbers SDIV looks like a better choice. Long term the stock value will be greater (if you assume JNJ will keep growing) but short-term SDIV is good(i haven't don't any research into SDIV other than the price so idk why its not a growth pick). Also, if you want fast dividend payments + a higher yield, look into REITs. They're real estate investments that pay each month with an average ~4% yield. Most of them are discounted rn cause of the pandemic ;) so now is a good time to invest and hold long term.
My 401k is comprised of all monthly dividends. I know my investments are consider dangerous. I have roughly $400k in my 401k and my annual dividends equal +/- $45k. I feel safe with them because some have been paying over 10 years. If I could post a photo I would show you my portfolio.
I really don’t expect to be able to “live” off of dividends, but they can really help ease financial burdens each month and make life a little bit more comfortable. Just because of that, I think they are worth investing in.
NUSI buys put options, it doesn't sell them. Selling put options increases your downside risk. Buying put options decreases your downside risk. A really great video overall. I'm sure that was just a slip of the tongue.
Dividends are dope. Personally, I sometimes use my dividends to buy other dividend and growth stocks for diversification instead of reinvesting in the same stock. To each their own methods though. The good thing is that you’re investing in the first place and that’s what’s important. Salute for the content!
The current market might give opportunities to maximize profit within a short term, but in order to execute such strategy , you must be a skilled practitioner
the best market strategy is to work with a credible investing coach. Since a while ago, I've been in touch with a coach, mostly because I lack the depth of understanding and mental toughness to deal with the ongoing market conditions. You lack the information necessary to succeed in a competitive market, not because you're doing anything wrong, but rather because of your lack of experience.
im hoping to start investing around 75% of my paycheck very soon and hopefully retire early ( i live quite frugally as it is and no plans to start a family/get married )
for me, I have a "hybrid" portfolio. I have my growth stocks and my fast money makers. Im 20 and got about 18k in my account. My biggest money makers have been AGNC, ORC, and PSEC. My best growth makers have been MSFT, MMM, and Ethereum if you count crypto. I started out with 15k from flipping cars, stimulus and tax return. Get about 100/month rn from dividends in which i reinvest every time. I started investing april 2020 and hope to have achieve 200/month in dividends by the end of the year
Any time a country transitioned to a fiat currency, they collapsed. That’s just world history; you don’t have to know about cryptocurrency to know that
I don't want to remain out of ignorance because people today have been having a lot of failures in forex and crypto because of poor orientation and bad experts.
I'M NEW TO CRYPTO CURRENCY TRADING AND I'VE BEEN MAKING LOSSES TRYING TO MAKE PROFIT MYSELF IN TRADING...I THOUGHT TRADING ON DEMO ACCOUNT IS JUST LIKE TRADING THE REAL MARKET... CAN ANYONE HELP ME OUT OR AT LEAST ADVICE ME ON WHAT TO DO?
I look at dividends as simply locking in some return while also projecting the share price to go up over time. If you’re looking short term, it’s not really a good strategy but short term investing is volatile. I personally don’t want to spend every waking hour looking at stocks and then position myself to panic and sell too early.
@@Cyilus_World Only partially. Make sure your kids understand the importance of continuing to invest; otherwise, the fortune you worked so hard for will be thrown away by reckless spending.
It is discouraging to think i need a lot of money into stocks to make a good monthly income with dividends, but I’m not giving up. No matter what, in the future, my money will grow a lot more, so either way, I win!
Regarding covered call ETFs like QYLD, holding a simple, naive, well-diversified portfolio of low-cost index funds for stocks and bonds and simply selling shares as needed has crushed these expensive, exotic covered call funds historically, and we would expect as much over the long term. They're nothing special. The capital appreciation component of these funds has been negative since inception. In a bear market, QYLD is going down with the market by the same amount less the option premium. In a bull market, covered calls are just capping the upside of the underlying at the strike price. Don't be fooled by the high yield carrot and subsequent mental accounting.
I like investing in close-end funds that pay monthly dividends. The trick is to hold long term and reinvest the monthly dividends plus buy more shares on a monthly basis or when ever you can afford to. This can be easily done because close-end funds are bought and sold on the stock market just like regular stock. That’d be enough to create a portfolio that would pay you between $50k to $70k in dividend income
I agree! That's why it is advisable that you have to invest while you still have a regular job or earning a regular income, and do it constantly. You still need to have something that will keep you going even if you're investing. Good financial planning and money allocation is the key. For a successful long-term strategy you have to seek guidance from a financial advisor.
@@kaylawood9053 As a new investor it's always great to hear from a person who has gone through all the difficult times and come ahead of it. What are some strategies i can employ to be successful?
@@kaylawood9053 I copied her whole name and pasted it into my browser; her website appeared immediately, and her qualifications are excellent; thank you for sharing.
The stock market's dividends motivated me to start investing. What counts, in my opinion, is that you will be able to live off of dividends without selling if you invest and make more money in addition to payouts. It suggests that you can give your children that advantage, giving them a head start in life. I've invested more than $600k throughout the years in dividend stocks; I'm still buying more today and will keep doing so until the price drops even further.
I wholeheartedly concur, which is why I appreciate giving an investment coach the power of decision-making. Given their specialized expertise and education, as well as the fact that each and every one of their skills is centered on harnessing risk for its asymmetrical potential and controlling it as a buffer against certain unfavorable developments, it is practically impossible for them to underperform. I have made over 1.5 million dollars working with an investment coach for more than two years.
@@danieljackson87 Wow, that sounds great, but how can I contact your investment coach?
@@mikeharry96 There are many financial coaches who excel in their profession, but for the time being, I employ Julie Anne Hoover because I adore her methods. You can make research and find out more.
@@danieljackson87 There are many financial coaches who excel in their profession, but for the time being, I employ Julie Anne Hoover because I adore her methods. You can make research and find out more.
Bot...
I did my homework on which stocks and ETFs I like for the long run, made a plan for dollar cost averaging for a year and I'm sticking to it, trying not to panic.
Just because there are opportunities in the market doesn’t mean you should go in blindly. To understand the potential factors that contribute to your financial growth, I'll advise you to seek the help of a professional
The best course of action if you lack market knowledge is to ask a consultant or investing coach for guidance or assistance. Speaking with a consultant helped me stay afloat in the market and grow my portfolio to about 65% since January, even though I know it sounds obvious or generic. I believe that’s the most effective way to enter the business at the moment.
Who is the professional who is advising you, if you could perhaps tell us? As a novice investing in stocks without the correct direction of a professional, I have lost a lot of money.
Lisa Angelique Abel is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You'd find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
This recommendation came at right time, very much appreciate it. curiously inputted his full name on my browser and found her site top search
I like investing in close-end funds that pay monthly dividends. The trick is to hold long term and reinvest the monthly dividends plus buy more shares on a monthly basis or whenever you can afford to. This can be easily done because close-end funds are bought and sold on the stock market just like regular stock. That’d be enough to create a portfolio that would pay you between $50k to $70k in dividend income
Just because there are opportunities in the market doesn’t mean you should go in blindly. To understand the potential factors that contribute to your financial growth, I'll advise you to seek the help of a professional
The best course of action if you lack market knowledge is to ask a consultant or investing coach for guidance or assistance. Speaking with a consultant helped me stay afloat in the market and grow my portfolio to about 65% since January, even though I know it sounds obvious or generic. I believe that’s the most effective way to enter the business at the moment.
@@hankmarks69 Could you kindly elaborate on the advisor's background and qualifications?
Vivian Carol Gioia is my Advis0r. She has since provided entry and exit points on the securities I concentrate on. If you want to check her out, you may do so online. I usually trade in accordance with her strategy.
I just looked her up on the internet and found her webpage with her credentials. I wrote her outlining my financial objectives and planned a call with her.
Investing prospects of a minimal sum of money can be both exhilarating and baseless. With the right approach, there’s a potential for significant wealth growth, Judging by this i'm still in search for suggestions as to a way to improve my retirement portfolio of $580k
Every strategy carries its own set of pros and cons and picking the right one depends on your specific financial goals, but in order to execute such effective decisions, you must be a professional.
Correct. Despite having no prior investing knowledge, I started investing before the pandemic and pulled in a profit of approximately $950k that following year. In reality, all I was doing was getting professional advice
I’m new to all this, heard it's a good time to buy and basically I've just got cash sitting duck in the bank and I’d really love to put it to good use seeing how inflation is at an all time-high, who is this coach that guides you, mind I look them up
My consultant is *Alicia Estela Cabouli* She has since provide entry and exit points on the securities I focus on. You can look her up online if you care for supervision. I basically follow her trade pattern and haven’t regretted doing so
I Looked up her name and her website popped up immediately, interesting stuff so far, about to schedule a session with her.
Having been concerned about finances throughout my entire adulthood, it's captivating to observe this video and realize that one can achieve alot if goals are set right. Experiencing the freedom of not being preoccupied with the financial concerns that consumed me for numerous years is truly liberating. I suppose this is the result of putting in diligent effort for the future.
Remarkable observations! Handling and staying abreast of things can be quite daunting for newcomers like myself. Are you a seasoned investor, or do you employ a methodical approach to staying well-informed?
Stacey appears to be really knowledgeable. Her resume, educational history, and qualifications were all quite good when I found her internet page. She will act in my best interests because she is a fiduciary. I thus scheduled a session with her.
True statement.
The thing to me is, if you invest and have other income outside of dividends then you will be able to live off dividends without selling. Which means you can pass that on to your kids which will give them a leg up in life. $52k dividends received in 2022.
I agree! That's why it is advisable that you have to invest while you still have a regular job or earning a regular income, and do it constantly. You still need to have something that will keep you going even if you're investing. Good financial planning and money allocation is the key.
This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000
Mind if I ask you to recommend this particular coach you using their service?
When ‘Carol Vivian Constable’ is trading, there's no nonsense and no excuses. She wins the trade and you win. Take the loss, I promise she'll take one with you.
She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran an online search on her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.
I would think that a major benefit of dividend investing is that calculating portfolio size needed is not relevant. We don't care about the value of the portfolio. We care about the sustainable income it pays. As you invest you can gradually see the income rise as you invest more and pull the retirement trigger when it's high enough regardless of the market sentiment.
Calculating the portfolio size needed is very relevant. - How else do you know how much to contribute?
by calculating how much additional income the contributions produce and estimating how that income rises. the capital value will fluctuate up and down over time so the amount of income new additions give you varies. so capital value being high with a market yielding 2% is no worse for retirement than the same portfolio at a different timepoints where the capital value is half and so the yield is 4%. so long as the yield is sustainable in real terms the capital value being half does not matter. its the same income stream at a different moment of low market sentiment vs high market sentiment.
Although there are many of chances in the financial markets, I've learnt enough over the previous few years to be skeptical about that. Knowing where to focus is crucial. When I started properly monitoring my investments, I started to amass riches. The importance of professional mentoring cannot be understated. Without the right coaching, people are more likely to make errors and lose money.
Who is the professional who is advising you, if you could perhaps tell us? As a novice investing in stocks without the correct direction of a professional, I have lost a lot of money.
Catherine Morrison Evans, is the coach that guides me, you probably might have come across her before I found her through a Newsweek report. She's quite known in her field, look her up online.
“The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago, the second best time is to do it now!” -Chinese proverb
This is so true
👍👍
Hmmm yes, very wise
Fist time I ever seen this quote... absolutely love it
THANK YOU....
Dividends from the stock market encouraged me to begin investing. What matters, in my opinion, is that if you invest and make additional money in addition to dividends, you will be able to live off of dividends without selling. It implies that you can provide that benefit for your children, giving them a head start in life. I've invested more than $600K in dividend stocks throughout the years; I'm currently buying more today and will continue to do so until the price falls even further.
@RodxmirixmWow, that sounds great, but how can I contact your investment coach?
I greatly appreciate it. I'm fortunate to have come upon your message because investing greatly fascinates me. I'll look her up and send her a message. You've truly motivated me. God's blessings on you
Dividends are a great thing, but they’re only really effective for passive income when you either have somewheres over 20 to 25 thousand shares of a high yielding stock. Meaning you likely need to have a few hundred thousand if not more invested in it. Re-investing dividends back into the same stock certainly does snowball with compound interest, but you only really start seeing it after 20 years of never stopping and likely needing to add additional money of your own with it….so it’ll be time consuming and costly. The way I see it if you have a million dollars at some point, that’d be enough to create a portfolio that would pay you between 50 to 70 thousand in dividend income
Like Warren Buffet said, dividends are only good if the business you’re investing into can’t make good use of that capital. So if you’re trying to invest into businesses with actual growth, looking at dividends is a waste of time. Why are you investing into a company if they’re returning capital to you because they think you can make better use if it than they can. There’s only one reason, and it is a place to park your capital to pay you a small return with large established businesses because you aren’t trying to grow your portfolio anymore, but to live off of it. It’s not much different from bond investing.
Don't depend your market assessments and decisions on hearsay and rumors; I did it in 2020 and ended up with worthless market holdings. Before I started noticing any notable improvements in my portfolio, Helene and I had to completely rebuild it. I've been using the same advisor ever then, and in just two years I've scaled up to $876k. Depending on where you look, a bullish or down market might both produce good profits.
Thats a good one. I know a lot of folks that made fortunes from the Dotcom crash as well as the 08’ crash and I’ve been looking into similar opportunities in this present market. Could this coach that guides you help?
She should. Having a counselor is quite imperative for portfolio diversification. My advisor is ''Helene Claire Johnson''. She is easily looked up and has extensive knowledge of the financial markets.
Found her webpage, I wrote her an email and scheduled a call. Hopefully she responds. Thank you.
In spite of how everyone is frightened and calling the crash, there is already an excessive amount of demand waiting to absorb it, which is another reason it's less likely to happen that way. This forecast was not made in 2008, at least not by the general public, as I will explain below. The ownership rate peaked in 2004, according to the other comment. We reached a peak in the second quarter of 2020 and are currently at the median level. From 2008 to 2012, it fell by 3%, and in the second quarter of 2020, it dropped from 68 to 65.
@@tatianastarcic My portfolio has been in the gutter for the entire year, so I started researching new ways to profit in the market, but everything I tried just seemed to miss the mark. Please let us know the name of your financial advisor.
@@tatianastarcic Thank you for this tip. it was easy to find your coach. Did my due diligence on her before scheduling a phone call with her. She seems proficient considering her résumé.
Nobody can become financially successful over night. They put in background work but we tend to see the finished part. Fear is a dangerous component, hindering us from taking bold steps we need in other to reach our goals.
@rachealhubert74 Alice Marie Coraggio her trading strategies is working for me for more than a year now and I’m making good profit from the stock market and she's 100% honest, reputable and trustworthy
*DONALD NATHAN SCOTT.*
The most important thing that should be on everyone's mind currently should be to invest in different sources of income that doesn't depend on the government. Especially with the current economic crisis around the word. This is still a good time to invest in various stocks, Gold, silver and digital currencies.
The Market have been suffering over the past month, with all the three indexes recording losses in recent weeks. My $400,000 portfolio is down by approximately 20%, any recommendations to scale up my returns before retirement will be highly appreciated.
Find stocks with market-beating yields and shares that at least keep pace with the market for a long term. For a successful long-term strategy I recommend you seek the guidance a broker or financial advisor.
Very true , I diversified my $400K portfolio across multiple market with the aid of an investment advisor, I have been able to generate over $900k in net profit across high dividend yield stocks, ETF and bonds in few months.
@@CraigMitchell376 Please can you leave the info of your investment advisor here? I’m in dire need for one.
You can do your research and be on the lookout for one with intelligent strategies who'll help your portfolio maintain an unwavering and a progressive growth. Diana Luise Hines is my FA. She has the Flexibility & Expertise to Meet Your Needs. Verify her yourself
@@CraigMitchell376 Thank you for this amazing tip. I just looked the name up, wrote her explaining my financial market goals and scheduled a call
My dividend journey began when I realized that two particular expenses in my budget were always going to go up and never go down. The two expenses were taxes and insurance. I realized that the dramatic rise in both will need some added income. So, I started buying shares paying dividends. I can now see that this will be the path I need to take to make sure those two expenses will not overtake my future income.
As a beginner, educate yourself, Learn the basics of investing and the stock market. There are many resources available online, including books, articles, and online courses. It’s a good idea to diversify your portfolio across different stocks and sectors to minimize risk. I’ve heard of people accruing over $550k during recessions and inflation, its important to do your own research.
I wholeheartedly concur, which is why I appreciate giving an investment coach the power of decision-making. Given their specialised expertise and education, as well as the fact that each and every one of their skills is centred on harnessing risk for its asymmetrical potential and controlling it as a buffer against certain unfavourable developments, it is practically impossible for them to underperform. I have made over 1.5 million dollars working with an investment coach for more than two years.
Wow, that sounds great, but how can I contact your investment coach?
There are many financial coaches who excel in their profession, but for the time being, I employ Helene Claire Johnson because I adore her methods. You can make research and find out more
I greatly appreciate it. I'm fortunate to have come upon your message because investing greatly fascinates me. I'll look her up and send her a message. You've truly motivated me. God's blessings on you
Informative. For me, it's not about living off dividends. I simply want them to assist. My goal is to work part time versus full time.
This is da way!
I had not thought of it from that perspective. Definitely worth considering. Thanks!
I see it as a back up income in case something happens to me and I can't work.
Dividends are what you need them to be...if it's to use it so that you can work part time...so be it. For others it's retirement....for other, it's just to have their bills paid every month even if they are not retired. There is no official rule, it's whatever floats your boat which is why I agree with what you said.
exaclty better to have more streams of income to get me to my end goal. dont want to live off dividends but use them to buy more stocks.
"Buying a stock is easy, but buying the right stock without a time-tested strategy is incredibly hard. Hence what are the best stocks to buy now or put on a watchlist? I’ve been trying to grow my portfolio of $260K for sometime now, my major challenge is not knowing the best entry and exit strategies... I would greatly appreciate any suggestions.
Hold your putz..
With markets tumbling, inflation soaring, the Fed imposing large interest-rate hike, while treasury yields are rising rapidly-which means more red ink for portfolios this quarter. How can I profit from the current volatile market, I'm still at a crossroads deciding if to liquidate my $125,000 bond/stock portfolio.
Focus on two key objectives. First, stay protected by learning when to sell stocks to cut losses and capture profits. Second, prepare to profit when the market turns around. I recommend you seek the guidance a broker or financial advisor.
@MileyGodson Please can you leave the info of your investment advisor here? I’m in dire need for one.
These scam bots are under each comment. Do people actually still fall for this?
I’ve set my kid up. Every investment I make, I mimic for her. She’s going to have a huge jumpstart when she reaches adulthood and I hand over control of her portfolio. I’ll never be able to live off my dividends. But she will. And when I’m too old to care about my portfolio, I’ll merge it into hers. And that’s what it’s all about in the end right? Set the next generation up to be better than what you were.
ur kid will blow it all on hard drugs
Amazing mindset!
@@hades9189 drug abuse is not funny. to fuel a coke addiction u will need between 600-2400 dollars a month. just for drugs!! might be even more if u stay up all night on coke.. u rly want this for his daughter??
I apologize for my comments above I'm not sure if I'm fighting the demons or I'm the demon
Wtf Isak?! Change ur name to Nutsak.
Is there anything like proof recession stock? I am 58 years and would like help in managing my retirement portfolio which is currently $1.25M...down from a high of $1.67M….
Very true! I've been able to scale from $350K to $650K this red season because my FA figured out Defensive strategies to protect my portfolio and profit from this roller coaster market.
Sandrine Nadege Logan is widely known. You can verify her and use her services if you want.
I started investing because I liked the extra money from stock dividends. The key, in my opinion, is to make enough money through both investing and dividends, so you can live off the dividends without selling anything. This way, you might pass on this financial advantage to your kids. I've put more than $600K into dividend stocks over the years, and I'm still buying more, planning to keep going until prices drop more.
Hearing from an experienced investor who has survived the crisis and prospered is always comforting. It could be worrisome when your portfolio goes from green to red, but if you have invested in strong firms, you should just keep growing them and stick to your goal.
Uncertainty... it took me 5 years to stop trying to predict what’s about to happen in market based on charts studying, cause you never know. not having a mentor cost me 5 years of pain I learn to go we’re the market is wanting to go and keep it simple with discipline.
Could you kindly elaborate on the advisor's background and qualifications?
Credits goes to " Sonya lee Mitchell" one of the finest portfolio managers in the field. She's widely recognized; you should take a look at her work.
Is it a good time to buy stocks right now? How long will it take for us to recover? I know everyone claims that equities are now inexpensive. Although there are tactics to be applied in this market, the common person cannot access these strategies. Would I be better off investing my money somewhere else?
If the market has taught me anything, it's that it usually bounces back, but I can't seem to concentrate on the long term, especially because important variables like my retirement and my reserve are having a disastrous impact on inflation. I need a reliable data trajectory as well as a solution as soon as feasible.
@@joesphcu8975 Due to the significant falls, I need advice on how to rebuild my portfolio and develop more successful tactics. Where can I find this teacher?
I can see why She is so busy; her career and outstanding qualifications are Fascinating! So I immediately copied Eileen's complete name and pasted it into my browser.
Amazon is at 92$ a share rn u better get in quick
I just dropped half my life savings in it 15 minutes ago 😂 this shit is about to blast off
Investing in alternative income streams that are independent of the government should be the top priority for everyone right now. especially given the global economic crisis we are currently experiencing. Stocks, gold, silver, and virtual currencies are still attractive investments at the moment.
@Jake Farmers please how do i find Jennifer?
@Jake Farmers Jennifer really seem to know her stuff. I found her website, read through her resume, educational background, qualifications and it was really impressive. She is a fiduciary who will act in my best interest. So, I booked a session with her
^^^^Every single person aside from myself in this thread is a scammer.
@@veniceblackwood2931 any idea how i can go from pretty much broke living check by check to living off of 50k a month. idk if your meaning you had 350k to 650k a month or something. but if so id like to know how to get there pretty quick. may have to tell that mountain to be flat or move out the way.
@@son_of_hiskingdom5092 look the F/A up
I entirely agree that now is an ideal time to capitalize on the market for long-term gains, but it wouldn't hurt to know how to make short-term profit. I've heard of investors making over $400k profit in this current sinking market, and I'm looking for ideas on how to earn similar profits.
The market is volatile at this time, hence i will suggest you get yourself a financial-advisor that can provide you with entry and exit points on the shares/ETF you focus on.
very true, I started investing before the pandemic and that same year I pulled a profit of about $600k with no prior investing experience, basically all I was doing was seeking guidance from a financial-advisorr, you can be passively involved with the aid of a professional.
Hi Matthew, Do you mind sharing info on the adviser who assisted you? been saving for pension since age 18 - company scheme. along the way I hit higher tax, so I added to my company pension with a SIPP (tax benefits) I'm 50 now and would love to grow my finance more aggressively, there are a few cars I still wish to drive, a few mega holidays, etc.
@@ThomasHeintz Elise Marie Terry is my portfolio-coach, I found her on Bloomberg where she was featured, I looked up her name on the internet. Fortunately I came across her site and reached out to her, you can verify her yourself.
@@Adukwulukman859 Thank you for this tip. it was easy to find your coach. Did my due diligence on her before scheduling a phone call with her. She seems proficient considering her résumé.
According to certain economists, it's possible that the U.S. and certain parts of Europe might experience a recession at some point in 2023. Although a global recession, which is characterized by a decline in annual global per capita income, is relatively uncommon due to the faster growth rates of emerging markets like China, in comparison to developed economies. I have pulled out more than $340k from my bank. After all, the FDIC covers only up to $250,000, and the implosion could have bad effect. Looking to invest into the stock market now. Does anyone know how I could go about it?
Currently, my primary worry is how to increase revenue during periods of quantitative easing. I cannot afford to witness my savings dwindle away.
We must consider safer investments with promising returns in order to plan for the future. If you approach investing with a five-year perspective and simply DCA whenever you receive a check. Under the direction of my investment advisor, "Deborah Sue Bohn", whose expertise in portfolio diversification is unsurpassed and client-focused, my portfolio has gained almost $643k since January 2022.
@@Patriciacraig599 please how do i find the lady you just mentioned?
@@Patriciacraig599 Thanks for sharing, I just looked her up online and I would say she really does have an impressive background on investing.
The first dividend investment video that tells the truth about dividend investing for the mass unlike other videos that makes it sound so easy.
There are a 'metric' fuckton of Vids that do the same
It is actually easy, dump money in solid dividend companies isn’t hard, the real problem is that most of that youtubers make their money from UA-cam and not dividends, that’s the reason their portfolios are always over six figures. Dividend investing is a generational strategy, that’s the way I see it, at least 20 years to see results.
@Mike T no most vids I see try to hype the shit out of dividends and make it look super easy to accumulate thousands of dollars in dividend investing. The problem is they are making several thousand dollars a month through UA-cam so can afford to invest 2-5k a month easy some of them. This strategy is unrealistic for the vast majority of people. The younger you are it's better to invest in growth and value stocks with high long term growth potential.
@@connordutton674 Can you put $200-$500 in stocks each month? Maybe reduce an expense you don't really need? I'm not that well off and put $500 a month into stocks. It's not that hard but the hard part is seeing it grow so slow for the first few years.. Have patience and do research.
@@MrLaughingcorpse not everyone can afford to do that. Even if I reduce all my expenses I still won't be able to take out $500 monthly for investing. However I'm separating about $250 for that, it's all I can do for now.
One of the best content I’ve seen. stock is the best though I don’t self trade but I still make my profit with the help of my broker till I'm sure I can start of self trading.
I'm looking forward to investing in the stock market. I am still trying to figure out how the entire thing works
@@theresagarcia1218 Obviously trading in stock is very volatile and risky, that's the reason most investors trade with a professional broker.
@@theresagarcia1218 My personal broker/investment manager is 'PRISCILLA DIANE AIVAZIAN", she runs a stock investment platform where you don't have to undergo any stress in the trades, she manages my account and all I need to do is invest capital and she gets a tiny bit of my returns as her commission. Just look with her name online, she can help you get started.
@@mayacho4910 Thank you for this, i will be sure to look her up, hopefully she can help.
@@theresagarcia1218 You are welcome.
People need to look at Dividends as extra income like a part time job and NOT EVER as cure financial problems solution.
A part time job you don't actually have to clock in and work at. Gotta love it!
It's essentially just compounding interest in a bank account.
@@godtrader6102 Yes, albeit with a better return on investment because there's usually some sort of capital growth involved rather than just whatever interest rates the Fed will allow.
5:34
Just because a stock is going up doesn’t mean it’s a good investment. just because a stock is going down doesn’t mean it’s a bad investment. theres more to a stock than just its stock price. An entire company more. focus on the company, not just the stock price. true words from my F.A Jane Marie Kunak...i made over half a million from ALB and NVDA
I know Jane Marie Kunak. I have been following her track record ever since i looked her up on the web. Quite impressive.
Consistently investing in quality dividend paying companies over the long term is a relatively easy strategy to create generational wealth,
Impressive!
Definitely doing my own research on jane, really awesome.
JNJ has also tripled its stock value in the last 20 years, Dividend investing is not just about dividends, you must also look at the appreciation of the underlining stock, 2% yield is not so bad if the stock is also appreciating at 6 to 8% each year
qyld is at 15.87 right now so down 29.7%. Appreciation of the underling stock is very important J&J is up 1.2%.
Yes,the more shares you can accumulate with the help of dividends,the better off in the long run!
i never want to sell my golden goose so i need dividends
QYLD is decent for retired people who just want income, but not great for younger investors. Lets say we put $10,000 into Johnson and Johnson, and the same into QYLD in 2014-today. While the QYLD dividend would still be just over 3 times the Johnson and Johnson the J&J portfolio is still worth more overall. (22,659 in J&J to 18,231 in QYLD). It really just depends on your living situation.
We should focus on creating passive income source like dividend income so that we can live decent life after retirement. So that we are not dependent on anyone during age when we don't have any other income source with us. Dividend income if not able to give us any happiness but atleast it will make sure that we don't live in financial pain in retirement life.
Thats why I invest in OKE, at .93c dividend a share at 50.86 a share, a much better payout, which amounts at 10K to about 200$ every 3 months, this is just one stock in my portfolio
@@waynecsmith5145 I'm still looking for the hidden gems
i read this as i invested in COKE that would be make some profit
@@pixies64 are you talking about
KO coca cola
Or
OKE ?
Thanks! I just took a look. #HiddenGem
@@blackwaltz3135 cocaine
Made my first £200 k from buying ETFs and startup company’s Stocks over a year, I was able to generate good ROi monthly after tax most thanks that my portfolio is managed by one of the best fiduciary sir Arlo Eric and ever since it’s been a great source of income for short and long term
Hi there,
what if I will like to give it a try with your pro, since you are familiar with how this works maybe you can connect me
After listening to some of Robert kiyosaki podcasts I was able to decide on what I want and went into Stocks
Thank you, I have sent him a mail
If you are done with all the research that needed to convince you to start investing, then you should not hesitate and take a leap into the investment industry. However, you must understand that just having sufficient money is a solid requirement for you to make investments in the right places and things
I have been selling covered calls for 2 years now. J&J has been one that I was gifted by parents. They love dividend stock. When I learned about covered calls and found out that 80% of call expire worthless. I wanted to be on the seller side. On $300,000 it is possible to earn $1500 to $2000 A week. I sell a call way out of the money so I rarely get called. If I do I usually earn an added 8% per week return PER WEEK. I am now working on a You tube channel to share this with others. I love how you do not do this from a nice studio which I dont have. Have a geart day and thanks for this video. Bill
I'm both a dividend and growth investor! the trick is to diversify enough to where you actually get good dividend payments Monthly. I made my first million from repositioning my stocks using a full service broker so i invested and re-invested my dividend profits...
My advice is always to diversify and you can let the market determine your allocation. great one
Did you start out as a dividend investor meaning right out the gate from college? Or was it a transition from a prior job?
How did you start?
Exactly 🥰
@@GoblinUrNuts
I'm at the ground level but K will stay the course 💯.
Honestly I'm a dividend investor for my future child not me. I want to give them the start I never had.
make sure you teach them how to work for it
Both of these comments are so important. Many people make the mistake of thinking we’re an individualist society, but it’s more accurate to say we’re a family society. Many people make money to give their kids a better future, and as the old saying goes, the ideal society is one where men plant the seeds to trees they may never live to see grow. But often the best gift you can give someone is instilling a work ethic, gratitude, and providing challenges to overcome.
Me too buddy...me too
Yo this made my smile more power to ya man we need more people like you in this world
Thought exactly the same thing. I just need a wife now and then a child. :D
History teaches us that a crash is inevitable. My spouse and I are adding a variety of stocks/ETF to our present holdings and we've set asides a good amount to start following inflation-indexed bonds and stocks of companies with solid cash flows. I believe it is a good time to capitalize on the market for long-term gains, but it wouldn't hurt to know means of actualizing short term profits as well. I have approximately $750k stagnant in my port_folio that needs growth.
Make your diligent research. 08' 2020' 2022' all even years! the bigger risk now is not inflation, it's deflation. I'd suggest you get yourself a portfolio-coach that can provide you with entry and exit points on the assets you focus on.
@@svengrot7943 Right. I'm sure the idea of a coach sounds controversial to a few, but new study by investopedia found that demand for investment coaching sky-rocketed over 41% since the rona-outbreak till date. Based on firsthand encounter I can say for certain, their skillsets are top notch, I've built a solid 4 years+ working relationship with my coach, gaining rare but useful insights and after subsequent investing, accruing approx. $1.75m in savings thus far.
@Nixon McGovern I have saved myself from all the hassle that chaotic market causes. These days the best way to come into the market space is reading, studying, patience and seeking guidance when necessary, due to my line of work i can’t handle my portfolio so i just copy the trades of ‘' Theresa Mary Chamblee” a CFA I saw on Bloomberg business news. It’s been smooth since then.
Maryland Chambers was my dream girl back in the 80’s
What I do is invest into ETFs and blue chip stocks but I sometimes focus on ETFs that mirror the performance of a major index like the S&P 500 for good ROI monthly and long term
how do you know what stocks to invest into asking as a beginner eager to grow my finances for my future
I once dabbled in stocks and bought shares worth 9k but was growing slowly and learnt to understand the higher the investment the higher returns plus I lack the skill
@@jidaloida106 I use the service of a fiduciary under a great broker, that is the most effective way I have known, Look up the name Benjamin ravies, that's the name of my fiduciary he trades the market for me with his expertise while I earn he charges commission on profits
@@randy4773 thanks, I just did that and found his site
This is a good video but I can’t get on board with this QYLD advice. QYLD has never recovered from the 2018 decline, nor the 2020 crash, and will not recover from the 2022 bear market. It offers an 11% distribution but typically loses value each year with no prospect of recovery because of its ATM covered call model.
QQQX is a better choice, and it’s what I switched too.
Bear market .
Euphemism of the century.
I know, it hasn't happened yet, but we won't look back on this year and talk about the bear market... tread carefully in this market and hold cash, physical metal. If the contrived cyber attack they'll pin on the big bad east scapegoats goes as planned, well see brokerages and banks wiped clean and sorry , FDIC and the crooked DTCC aren't compensating anything. The criminals at the top are facing a lot of financial issues. Don't think they haven't collaborated I mean colluded to protect their own. The amount of short selling in the market that's gone unchecked with only pretend investigations by DOJ and SEC alone would cost in the trillions to clear up. Don't take my word for it though. Just watch it because the rules have changed
@@dont.ripfuller6587 this is some major tin foil hat shit but also kinda makes sense
Actually, if you do the math, you want a high but stable dividend regardless of stock price and low or negative stock price growth, exactly like QYLD to maximize your value IF YOU ARE REINVESTING DIVIDENDS. I made a spreadsheet and showed that even at a flat stock price and flat average dividend for QYLD (using the last 5 years average) QYLD outperformed a dividend growth stock with INCREASING stock value (even at 4% a year) with the same returns % as QYLD (which you can't get). QYLD grows your money faster and generates more dividend income than the alternative with little risk due to the ability to buy more shares because the price isn't increasing. And the higher you grow your dividend amount to each month, the faster it all snowballs.
@@michaelrudolph7003 if you were getting QYLD’s dividend with a flat stock price, it would be a wonderful investment. But unfortunately the stock doesn’t seem to show an ability to stay flat or increase. It just keeps going down over time.
On my channel, I have a video showing QQQX vs QYLD. QQQX wins since 2013 with or without dividend reinvestment.
@@michaelrudolph7003 I missed out , no , not missed , I screwed up 2 killer dividend plays in the last month. ONTKR ontrak and OP oceans pal inc. 🤦🏽♂️ I had ontrak for less than $5 it had a guaranteed payout of over $2 per share, shares have jumped to $10.50 since EDD in Feb. I wasnt thinking clearly and cleaned it out balancing the portfolio profits,
and OP ex div date was today- guaranteed .20¢ per share per year at share price of .77¢ but I forgot until your comment reminded me .
I love playing with compound interest calculators though...I have a crypto stake that's around 23% right now, i dont expect it to be sustainable but I'm riding it while it's there, if I can pull 4 years off out if it ....🤞🏼🤞🏼
Thanks for keeping it real with us. (For the average person, it’s nearly impossible.) people need to hear that because you tubers, etc make it sound like a cake walk.
Right. Just to keep people watching and searching for their content
I just found out that "cake walk" (seemingly so innocent) has a very unpleasant origin. Just sharing that in case you didn't know. No judgement. Take care
💯💯💯
This was the most honest and straight forward video I've seen thusfar
@@vail51No one cares, Karen
I watch gen x dividend investor and dividend bull between both you get great dividend stocks insight but with gen x he's the most transparent and breaks the company and dividend percentage possible if that alone doesn't help find out what company to go with im not sure what else would and it gives you a direction and shows what works and how many to obtain a nice return happy investing 🍻
my whole thing is i don't want to NOT work. I just want to work full time and still be able to do things like go to the dentist, get a car, and travel without either losing my job or saving for two or three years.
Well people in Hell want ice water so...
About the car: Please watch a few videos by Scotty Kilmer. Know what brands have the best track records for reliability, etc. Hint: Honda and Toyota. Don't buy new. Make sure that make and model doesn't have a flaws(s) right off the line. I get cars 15-20 ears old. Have the fluids changed, replace the battery with a rebuilt one, then drive for 6-8 years. Most times,, they eventually throw a part. If it's a starter, or alternator, u can replace for around $50....4 bolts and 2 wires. If it's more complicated, I give them to my son, who does the replacement and drives or resells. He also gifts these nice older cars to young ppl he knows who need wheels, and teaches any who are interested how to replace a part.
@@staceykersting705 i really appreciate that response, thank you. when i have the money for my next car, i will definitely be referring to scott's videos. and tell your son if he gets the urge to gift a car again, there's a 26 year old in bloomington illinois who would love one lol!
@@tribbybueno We're in western Oregon. he usually gifts them to his friend's kids, just starting out, if they're doing well in school/jobs.
@@nutbastard crazy that's your reaction to me wanting things the 'average' american gets to have. i know people in other countries have it worse, but i'm already here. if there's gonna be this pretense that if you're an American you get to have a healthy body and access to amenities like a used car and some unpaid time off from work, i would like to have that. i work 40-50 hours a week, exercise, cook all my own food and pay all my own bills. i help people in need and perform my other duties as a contributing member to this society. just saying that it would be nice to get what average people get. your cynicism is super washed out and overplayed man
The problem we have is because Most people always taught that " you only need a good job to become rich " . These billionaires are operating on a whole other playbook that many don't even know exists.
Money invested is far better than money saved , when you invest it gives you the opportunity to increase your financial worth.
The wisest thing that should be on everyone mind currently should be to invest in different streams of income that doesn't depend on government paycheck, especially with the current economic crisis around the world. This is still a time to invest in Stocks, Forex and Digital currencies.
The wisest thing that should be on everyone mind currently should be to invest in different streams of income that doesn't depend on government paycheck, especially with the current economic crisis around the world. This is still a time to invest in Stocks, Forex and Digital currencies.
I also keep seeing lot's of people testifying about how they make money investing in Stock, Forex and Crypto Trade(Bitcoin) and I wonder why I keep loosing. Can anyone help me out or at least advice me on what to do.
Even with the right technique and assets some investors would still make more than others. As an investor, you should've known that by now that nothing beats experience and that's final. Personally I had to reach out to a stock expert for guidance which is how I was able to grow my account close to $35k, withdraw my profit right before the correction and now I'm buying again.
reinvesting dividends is the best way for me 👍💎
Thanks for the video! XOM is still around 6% yield and the stock price has gone up 100% in six months.
A two year track record is deceptive. Consider options are worth more when volatility is high and calls do better when stocks are booming. This will make those perform wildly differently over the years. Not necessarily bad, just be aware
Yep, these days with robo-investors the returns you're looking at here aren't that much better than what you'd get from just having the funds invested in a balance of stocks and bonds both foreign and domestic.
Yeah, there could be some real bad results in a bear or volatile market. It's a young etc and no experience with that because we've been in a decade long bull run...
Literally the FIRST channel I have EVER turned on Notifications for EVER! LIKE THE WHOLE TIME UA-cam HAS BEEN AROUND...
I think the best way would be to invest in growth first, then transition your portfolio into dividends once it’s big
if its big
@@kodomo1418 why wouldnt it be big? literally the stock market has always gone up the entire time it has existed. long as you dont paper hand the crashes, if you invest long term you will always be up.
boa sorte
if ur not happy with ur return on 10k u wont be happy with return on 1m either.
@@yurigadaisukida4457 thats if you pick good stocks. if you put everything in a startup that goes to 0..
Normally during this time of year, we see certain stocks rise in the market, but that is very unlikely this season due to the recession and overall economic crisis. The issue is that I've been holding a lot of stocks hoping to sell for profit this month, but I'm not sure if I should keep holding or sell, I've been running at a loss since Q2 and 2023 is not looking promising for investors. The market hasn't looked good since COVID, and it's only going to get worse by 2023; you should sell.
Because the market will continue to fall, I advise you to conduct a critical analysis of the companies you own and their data projections for the next few years. Even better, you could have an investment adviser assist you in restructure your overall portfolio and offset the bad apples you're holding; that strategy has worked for me so far, saving me a lot of stress and anxiety, and it's also very time efficient.
@@xionglu9183 I’ve honestly been considering going the route of an advisor, this current market is no jokes for the average retail investor, but do these advisors really make any notable changes to a portfolio or am I better off on my own.
@@lloydthomas1946 Unless you plan to buy and hold stocks for a decade, which I don't see why you wouldn't, I've been investing closely with an investment adviser for the past two years and have pulled in over $850K in net gains, and I'm not concerned about where we're headed this year because I know I'm in good hands.
@@michealjohnsons9910 Very well said; could you recommend the coach who is guiding you? I'm only a beginner, and I've had a bad experience since last year
@@michealjohnsons9910 I simply typed her name into Google to find her website. So far, it appears intriguing. I'll call her on the agreed-upon date and let you know how it went. Thanks
Thank you for being the first investment video to use realistic numbers. All the other videos out there assume everyone starts out investing with 300k in savings🤦🏼♂️.
I have brought JNJ in the 90's for $ 42.00 a share and I have 1279 shares and yes they do give me a great drip. but I do need to think about splinting it though because it has gotten too big . in enjoy the work you did on jnj.
Shouldn't matter how big it's gotten. You're up huge and it's not going bankrupt anytime soon.
Did about exactly the same thing. Same kind of numbers on JNJ. My suggestion is don't sell, but use the dividends to invest in something else paying a bigger yield. That is what I do. Otherwise, you are going to pay a miserable cap gains tax.
i was about to lash this video, then I took a bit time to listen to the whole video and ended up with subscribing :)
Would love to see a video about the differences between snowballing quarterly and monthly dividends.
My thoughts exactly
you can just test this on a compound interest calculator. Monthly will end up with slightly higher returns.
@@leagueplays2100 Compound interest calcs that I've played with all work on a quarterly compound not a monthly. Monthly should have a different curve then a quarterly.
@@roamingcelt Do the spreadsheet (seriously, it is easy and you don't have to rely of some silly you tuber for your info). It matters, but not much. Generally if you express your interest rate as an annual rate of return you are then comparing apples to apples.
@@danielpaquette1597 If I compound 12x vs 4x or 1x per year it will make a difference over time. But this was just a suggestion for a topic.
This was an awesome video and with me only being 19 years old 90% of every paycheck I get from here on out goes straight into a Dividend fund with the option selected to reinvest my dividends
That's awesome keep up the good work
As a 41 year old, I attempted to do the same thing beginning in my late teens. I stayed the course through college, and for a few years after college. However, having a family makes it very challenging. Do your best to stick to your plan. Even if the investment percentage can't always be 90%, keep it as high as possible. I wish I had. You have an excellent plan, and I wish you all the best with achieving it. The outcome WILL be worth it.
@@lukew9036 how the hell can anyone save 90% of their paycheck? Are they earning like 20k a month or something? Are they not pay for food, taxes, transportation or accommodation?
@@comedyman112 Being a teen, living with parents that dont ask you to pay for anything. Only eat out once a month or so. If your work allows it get a public transportation pass thing to ride them for nearly free (its like 60€/year or so here if you are a teen. So this is cheap af). Having no car means no gas/repair costs... Having a hobby that doesnt cost much also helps. Like learning to code games and apps is literally free (besides the need of a device capable to run/write the code. Which can already be done from a raspberry pi for 40€~ if you dont need fancy graphics.)
@@GamesPlayer1337 i'm 29 atm, with a gf, not having to pay rent, owning a car, going on short trips 2-3 times a year. i guess it's doable if you're a teen. not so much at my age, just waiting to get married and have children soon
I think no matter what, dividend investments are only good once you reach the finish line. If you start with $10,000 today, you are much better off investing into normal growth index funds or ETF’s to accumulate wealth for down the road. Then once the wealth has accumulated, you move it over to dividends and get the monthly or quarterly payouts. Going straight into dividends is going to leave you missing out on a ton of profits. I did still learn something in this video, and that was the covered calls ETF’s, I never knew those existed and an 11% dividend is sweet.
How do you think about those now, since most of them are down 20-40% since you wrote that comment. I'm not asking to mock you, but more interested in if what you learned by now would you buy more now or think it will get worse ?
@@30secondsofras Nobody mentions sustainability of income, compensation for inflation over time not to mention total returns vs index funds.
Thank you. Very informative. I’m getting around $21 a month from dividends and really need to do something better than 2%. I don’t have forty years left in me! I retired six months ago and am trying to live off SS. Tough! I will look at those you suggested. Thank you.
Move to Thailand, Indonesia, India, Ecuador... You will live like a king on your SS
Look at Joseph Hogue on UA-cam. There are stocks that pay 6-8% dividends regularly.
Lmt
Check out the DeFi space in cryptocurrency. It’s not for everyone, but you could do some crazy things with 5-10% of your portfolio
In a gamer’s perspective, a self sustained dividend portfolio is the “Endgame” build.
Oh thanks i understand now
Yes, and I want to min/max that. I just want to know my Best in Slot for my portfolio already.
Pretty much. Clear $100k yearly on dividends. Make cost effective decisions, and reinvest the expendable income into higher risk trades, and either open franchises or conquer real estate with competent property management looking after your investment. Start with trailers, then houses, apartments, then hotels. Maybe buy up majority shareholder in a growing business, and be on the ground floor with logistics. Never stop. Pass the moon. We're flying out of the solar system!
I'm hearing this at age 19 with at least 10k saved up already. If I were to dedicate myself to this I could retire in 15 years
Good on you, man! Keep it up. I'm 30 with only a few thousand saved up. You are on the right track!
Fucking do it! that would be sick
Damn! How did you get 10k saved up at only 19? I'm 47 and I have less than 1k saved up.
Do it
@@moneyguy2008 Not to sound rude, but how do you have so little money saved up? Do you have money in other investments or do you live paycheck to paycheck?
My goal is similar: to live off dividends. But I learned early on that my capital would never get there by investing in dividend paying stocks now. Instead, I now focus on growth/value stocks to grow my capital as much as possible. I don't need to live off the dividends at the moment so that income isn't relevant. Growing my capital as much as possible will allow me to sell those stocks and buy high paying dividend stocks when I am ready to retire. In other words, what does a 4-12% yield mean to me now when my capital is low? I'd rather see growth returns of +10% each year until my capital is large enough that I could retire and live off a 4% dividend yield.
Edit: this is not financial advice. Just my own personal perspective and strategy.
@Tom ! I took the same approach. I dropped all my dividend paying stocks and ETF’s over a year ago and invested in high growth and value stocks. Im currently only yielding .0056% in dividend income right now on my portfolio but im up 112% in stock price from a year ago. Once im ready for monthly income through dividends i can sell all my massively appreciated growth and value stocks and get back to regular distributions of dividends.
Funny that he mentioned QYLD in the video. That .0056% im earning now is from that ETF. Its only 1% of my total portfolio, i just couldn't part ways with it when i sold all my other dividend paying stocks and ETF’s 😅
True but more risk with growth shares then dividend shares. I understand u points, very good one but more risk. U can do 60% dividend and 40% growth shares and keep reinvesting the dividend in the market to increase compound annj growth rate.
Sound strategy, makes perfect sense, thanks!
@@sleendrvr Yep, I have had a similar experience.
@@tomdeming Of course, research isnkey
I'm starting out investing by putting all my money in dividend growing stocks and ETFs, 10% dividends and over. Yes, you get taxed on the dividends as income, but I think starting out you have more of a mental advantage when you start seeing more money coming in the more you invest. Makes you want to invest even more. My idea is that I want the additional income to reinvest and give me the motivation to keep investing. And it helps my income so I don't get into a credit card trap and if I lose my job I can at least pay some or all of the bills. Once I get that dividend snowball really rolling I'll switch gears and use the majority to then invest in long term growth stocks. Most people starting out are struggling to pay the bills, no way they are going to blindly give their money away never to be seen again for 30 years. I think that's what keeps most people from investing.
The timing couldn’t be any perfect. Subscribed!
A balanced portfolio of Growth & Dividend stocks is the way to go.
Good video. At 62, I came to the conclusion that I needed a lot more money. I am more motivated in companies like TESLA and NIO. Thank you.
NIO is a great day trading stock
Tesla is a dumpster fire that will implode along w Musk. It hasn’t ever delivered on a product promise. It won’t last ,much longer but it’s decent for riding the “ old white mans feelings” wave if you want to pick a high point to cash out
I'm loving this type of content, thank you!
Good advice. I'm not that young and just started April last year. (for obvious reasons) Already at almost 10k invested making $50 a month off dividends. (6% yield) Dividend investing is extremely slow going at first. I'm not planning to live off it per say but just supplement my retirement with it. And all my 13 stocks are not high risk. I do detailed researching.
What stocks are they?
@@welder161q I have a channel where I revealed all my stocks and what they pay.
Only making $50/mo off $10k?
I'm making about $130/mo off $6700... ;)
Granted, I'm in a few riskier stocks that'll probably capital depreciate a bit over time (and, likely USOI will dry up as oil stabilizes; OILK already stopped giving dividends a month ago, which was annoying), but I'm running the dividends plus extra contributions into some other lower yield "cap/div growers" to compensate... We'll see how it works out in the long run.
Just rolled OILK sell-off proceeds over into PSEC, PFLT, GAIN, and bulking up a couple other positions by a share or two each. Anyway, they should be some decent monthly/quarterly income sources, to roll into other things and "snowball" over time.
Gonna' start working the other play, and try to slowly build up certain monthly positions to 100 shares/ea, then drip the proceeds into either bulking those positions, or buying into new positions and bulking those up to 100 shares/ea. Will probably start from the bottom (cheap monthly dividend earners) and work my way up (slightly more expensive dividend earners, offset by the dividends from the cheaper stocks)... We'll see how it works and if it helps accelerate getting more and more tickers up to the 100 shares/ea threshold over time...
@@MGmirkin I'm actually up to $78 a month off $11,000 invested but yeah tried to stay somewhat safe. Talked to a lot of other youtube investors and they thought 10% yield or above was just crazy. I'm at 8.59%.
My concern with ETF's like QYLD is that they haven't been tested under a prolonged bear market before, so there is that risk that you could lose your principle fast if it fails under those conditions. In fact, since inception in 2014 it's share value has been on a slow but steady decline. I know the point of it is the large dividend payout quickly, but remember your dividends naturally rise as share price increases (mostly) and when your shares rise your portfolio value rises and you don't have to pay taxes on that growth unless you sell, where as with dividends, even if reinvesting right away, you pay taxes. I do appreciate alternatives so great video, but if you are long term thinker, a combination of share value growth + healthy dividend reinvestment = more hard liquid dollars in the end with less risk. Perhaps short term, just to get the dividend money QYLD is great. My suggestion is just to hold the shares with a stop loss put in place at all times.
Qyld raises divedend payments when down. I have seen it hit 16% and come back to 11% as it recovers.
So unless you need that capitol which you should avoid qyld if you ever plan to sell as you will lose principal and gain alot of fun tax stuff
You only lose your principle if you sell and lock in your loss, or QYLD goes bust. The stock market goes up and down, and you are not guaranteed to make money.
@@BuceGar - In the past QYLD has never returned back to previous highs even after the market recovered from a dip, which is why I am worried about it long term. So I think you are missing my mathematical point. QYLD has failed to maintain its base value even during the Bull market & in the this long term possibility -- having accumulated thousands and thousands of shares from DRIP that are eventually worth almost nothing because the share price is no < $1 -- it won't matter if it pays 100% dividends at that point.
@@Emp6ft10in Your claim remains to be seen. QYLD isn't meant to gain in value, it's basically an annuity with a ticker symbol. If QYLD goes bust or is ever shut down, then your claim will be correct. It may also regain it's value when the Nasdaq recovers, it remains to be seen.
Think of QYLD like a piece of rental equipment…you pay $100 for it and it pays you $5 a month back. As long as it keeps running your getting $5 a month so do you care what it’s worth after 5 years? No you don’t as long as it keeps paying that dividend. Re-investing is like buying more equipment.
So basically, if you already have more then enough money then you know what to do with, dividends may be great but it doesn't really matter because you already have enough money then you know what to do with.
What is this enough money amount. I want to know
@@ZacklFair bout 25k or so
I guess you could use that money and setup your families future or someone you care about.
You can live off $1m and that's far from more money than you know what to do with. You can easily spend that in 5-10 years and if you are not dead by then you're fucked.
Basically if you basically understand the concept of investing you'd realize basically your comment is basically unnecessary. Basically.
So your recommendation is to buy a derivative of a derivited? risky
I'm really thankful I started investing recently at 20 years old.
Unfortunately, the all-time (~8 year) chart of QYLD goes from the upper left to the lower right. That high yield comes at a cost.... there are no free lunches.
Yes. These kind of products are suited best for investors that want to diburse their investissement at the end of their career without loosing exposure to dividends
It's only been around for 2 years how are you looking at an 8 year chart?
I’d like to know also how you’re seeing passed the 2 year mark on this ticker
@@bobfred73 @joshua Vincent a few places to try: tradingview, yahoo finance, tdameritrade. Not sure what site you are using, but I see that some places like seekingalpha only go back 2 years.
@@bobfred73 really? upper left to lower right... It was $25.02 in 2013 and it's 22.13 today.. It got down to $18 on the Covid19 crash.
What this video misses to address is that lower yielding stocks also increase stock price at a more rapid rate. Jnj increased value 2.7X thats the tradeoff. At some point you can go with higher yielding and sale jnj for some other higher yielding stocks. Qyld, reits or bdc wont see near as much growth as jnj or other lower tielding stocks.
JNJ. Got such increase only cause of covid
Ever wonder why none of these financial channels talk about how these are all taxed? Very important to everyone to look at the tax side of this. I am not a financial person so don’t ask me. But ask a tax advisor exactly how each one of these stocks are taxed or how they will effect your current tax circumstances.
Well, it’s income, so it’s taxed like income. In a later life scenario, you would ideally be working much less, so you would be in a lower tax bracket... if you are making 5000k a month between work and investment income, you would be in a lower tax bracket than you were when you were in your prime earning years.
All stock Capital gains aren’t treated equal. It also depends on if your stocks are in tax sheltered portfolios or taxable accounts. This is why I say talk with a professional.
@@naturescritter4691 Capital gains from stock is not the same thing as the “capital gains tax”. If you collect $100 a month in dividends, and then one of your stocks pays you 200 in capital gains at the end of the year, it’s all taxed at the same rate. Pretty sure Capital gains tax is levied when you make over a certain amount of money in a year (500k for a couple?)... but definitely talk to a tax professional.
Ahh yes, and A K-1 tax form is also taxed differently… and long term capital gains are different, and being part of a BDC could effect your taxes differently. And different states tax differently.
Just makes me wonder why I would say that it is “Very important to everyone to look at the tax side of this.”
@@naturescritter4691 my mistake, I didn’t realize you posted a public comment on UA-cam because you wanted to have a conversation with yourself. My bad!
ETF's and dividends have become a HUGE part of my investment portfolio for the past several months. Great video! Earned a new subscriber!
I look for dividend stocks that have a lower price and pay 10% or more. That way after owning 10 shares of a stock, I can buy a share with that stock. This is my retirement plan and I’m doing it for the long run.
ARCC and NEWT got absolutely murdered in the 2007-2009 financial crisis. 85% drop for ARCC and over 95% for NEWT. No thanks. I love the content you provide though. Great video!
I think you need to look for investments with growth that also have some level of dividend. My suggestions to consider would be RIO , ABR , PFE , SCHD , MS , JNJ , CM , RY , TD , BMO these are my top suggestions if looking for both strong Dividends & Growth that cover the sectors Minerals, Health , Finance & Real Estate
Takes alot of money to get these stocks!
I've started with large ones but only bought a few select because that's how I was being taught to build my portfolio.
Now I see there was possibly an easier less wallet draining way to accomplish this!
Am I missing something, or aren't there several high dividend yield ETFs that offer 6-10% like $SDIV at 7.25%? Every time I see people talking about dividend investing it's always the same 2-4% individual stocks.
It's because stocks like JNJ, KO, and MMM's stock prices rise with dividend. If you do the math, during 2017 jnj rose ~$33 while SDIV rose ~$1. Only looking at dividends numbers SDIV looks like a better choice. Long term the stock value will be greater (if you assume JNJ will keep growing) but short-term SDIV is good(i haven't don't any research into SDIV other than the price so idk why its not a growth pick). Also, if you want fast dividend payments + a higher yield, look into REITs. They're real estate investments that pay each month with an average ~4% yield. Most of them are discounted rn cause of the pandemic ;) so now is a good time to invest and hold long term.
@@Hi_Twichy Ah ok. Makes sense I hadn't considered that. I love REITs though, $O
This is the BEST and clearest after watching a bunch of investment videos.
My 401k is comprised of all monthly dividends. I know my investments are consider dangerous. I have roughly $400k in my 401k and my annual dividends equal
+/- $45k. I feel safe with them because some have been paying over 10 years. If I could post a photo I would show you my portfolio.
just write your top picks :)
Reason why everyone should have a profitable investment.people need money
You're right Investment is the key to surviving during times like this when the government decided to mess with people.
Yeah what type of Investment y'all are into .the stock market has been crashing lately.
@Owen Watson jr Yes that is true, you need an expert trader to trade for you especially as a beginner so you don't make losses.
I recommend you trade with expert Mrs Tracy walker she's obviously the best.i get my return weekly and my profit margin has been huge and massive.
Can someone actually make a living from Bitcoin?
I really don’t expect to be able to “live” off of dividends, but they can really help ease financial burdens each month and make life a little bit more comfortable. Just because of that, I think they are worth investing in.
NUSI buys put options, it doesn't sell them. Selling put options increases your downside risk. Buying put options decreases your downside risk. A really great video overall. I'm sure that was just a slip of the tongue.
Dividends are dope. Personally, I sometimes use my dividends to buy other dividend and growth stocks for diversification instead of reinvesting in the same stock. To each their own methods though. The good thing is that you’re investing in the first place and that’s what’s important. Salute for the content!
The current market might give opportunities to maximize profit within a short term, but in order to execute such strategy , you must be a skilled practitioner
the best market strategy is to work with a credible investing coach. Since a while ago, I've been in touch with a coach, mostly because I lack the depth of understanding and mental toughness to deal with the ongoing market conditions. You lack the information necessary to succeed in a competitive market, not because you're doing anything wrong, but rather because of your lack of experience.
That's impressive! I could really use the expertise of this advisors, my portfolio has been down bad. how can I contact them?
I looked up her full name online and found her page. I emailed and made an appointment to talk with her; hopefully, she gets back to me.
im hoping to start investing around 75% of my paycheck very soon and hopefully retire early ( i live quite frugally as it is and no plans to start a family/get married )
My best performing dividend ETF is SPHD. I have about 700 shares of SPHD and am getting paid about $100 every month.
at a 2.81% yield at present, that would require an investment of a mere $42704.
@@michaelsmith4904 wow lol
@@michaelsmith4904 sphd current dividend is 3.9 and im betting @oz Liz bought there shares a while ago when the yield was even higher.
Just got my subscription I love passive income, when I have off time I’m watching all the vids
for me, I have a "hybrid" portfolio. I have my growth stocks and my fast money makers. Im 20 and got about 18k in my account. My biggest money makers have been AGNC, ORC, and PSEC. My best growth makers have been MSFT, MMM, and Ethereum if you count crypto. I started out with 15k from flipping cars, stimulus and tax return. Get about 100/month rn from dividends in which i reinvest every time. I started investing april 2020 and hope to have achieve 200/month in dividends by the end of the year
Any time a country transitioned to a fiat currency, they collapsed. That’s just world history; you don’t have to know about cryptocurrency to know that
EOS price prediction: can it rise again?
EOS price prediction you've just said....
Can one generate a successful tips that can be of Good assistance to be financially free thinking
Please it will be of benefit to me if someone can help with more fact that's working recently
I don't want to remain out of ignorance because people today have been having a lot of failures in forex and crypto because of poor orientation and bad experts.
I'M NEW TO CRYPTO CURRENCY TRADING AND I'VE BEEN MAKING LOSSES TRYING TO MAKE PROFIT MYSELF IN TRADING...I THOUGHT TRADING ON DEMO ACCOUNT IS JUST LIKE TRADING THE REAL MARKET... CAN ANYONE HELP ME OUT OR AT LEAST ADVICE ME ON WHAT TO DO?
All you need as a beginner to make good profit from cryptocurrency is a professional trader who will trade on your behalf else you may make losses.
@lite john How can someone know a professional trader that is trustworthy when legit ones are hard to find this days.
@lite john How much can she make for you in every trade she does.😏
@lite john Wow this is really helpful for my situation!! Thanks guys I will try her.
@lite john Wow I'm just shock you mentioned and recommended Expert Mrs Jennifer Watson
I look at dividends as simply locking in some return while also projecting the share price to go up over time. If you’re looking short term, it’s not really a good strategy but short term investing is volatile. I personally don’t want to spend every waking hour looking at stocks and then position myself to panic and sell too early.
Dividends typically only come from established companies that aren’t going to grow though
The die without enjoying it part, is what scares me 😂😂😂‼️‼️
Odds are that won’t happen, and if it does you won’t be thinking about money..
For Warren Buffett, his enjoyment _is_ in running up the numbers while living frugally.
Do it for your family or kids then so when u die it goes to them
@@Fiiggy Dude, you nailed it.
@@Cyilus_World Only partially. Make sure your kids understand the importance of continuing to invest; otherwise, the fortune you worked so hard for will be thrown away by reckless spending.
Only video that is truthful about dividends.
It is discouraging to think i need a lot of money into stocks to make a good monthly income with dividends, but I’m not giving up. No matter what, in the future, my money will grow a lot more, so either way, I win!
If you don't find a way to make money while you sleep, You'll work until you die!
- Warren Buffett
Just found u. Time to watch all your vids
I just watched all of them - I recommend taking notes
Regarding covered call ETFs like QYLD, holding a simple, naive, well-diversified portfolio of low-cost index funds for stocks and bonds and simply selling shares as needed has crushed these expensive, exotic covered call funds historically, and we would expect as much over the long term. They're nothing special. The capital appreciation component of these funds has been negative since inception. In a bear market, QYLD is going down with the market by the same amount less the option premium. In a bull market, covered calls are just capping the upside of the underlying at the strike price. Don't be fooled by the high yield carrot and subsequent mental accounting.