You're really good but I don't really understand what you're saying when give the analysis breakdown of why you should or shouldn't invest in stock or any other investment. I don't understand the cause and effect of how these companies work that you can invest in. Any suggestions to gain better understanding
2:00 LTC - Senior Housing & Healthcare 3:11 MAIN - BDC; Low and Mid Business development Co. Business funding 6:08 SBR - Oil & Gas 7:41 GAIN - BDC; Business development Co. 10:10 AGNC - Mortgage REIT 11:56 BND - Bonds
Great video Joseph. I have been doing a lot of research the last few months in dividend stocks for long term cash flow. To answer your question, I couldn't care if the dividend payment was monthly or quarterly. I want to see healthy fundamentals, positive CAGR, and the assurance the company won't go bankrupt during hard times. That way in 30 years we can still collect that cash flow!
Monthly, because I'm looking for good picks that I can continue to get into over the years as a retirement income stock. Monthly payments are easier to manage and budget around than quarterly. Also when manually reinvesting dividends you can react to trends and dips more effectively with a monthly payout. You may be missing opportunities between your quarterly payments.
lol gladstone. I bought it when you first recommended it back in march or april, and thus far it has gained 15% in value not counting dividend. When the inverted rate scare happened, it was virtually unaffected.
I'm building a new portfolio with just monthly dividend payers. Right now it has APLE, STAG & EPR. I will be adding O in soon. I may add MAIN and LTC in at the beginning of the year. I like equity REITS because I understand how they operate. I think more of them should convert to monthly payers for people who want monthly income.
I'd feel safer with stocks that "won't let me down" with slightly lower yields. Some of the payout ratios were okay, but I don't know about the safety. Thanks for the suggestions at least.
Thanks for the information. I like share price growth more than dividends at this point. But I have to start a compound dividend portfolio simply because it grows itself.
I came here to learn how to trade after listening to a guy on radio talk about the importance of investing and how he made $460,000 in 4 months from $160k. Somehow this video has helped shed light on some things, but I'm confused about the current market volatility, I'm a newbie and I'm open to ideas.
@Tzion Talks all true, all i meant is quarterly stocks are way higher in quality over monthly payers generally, also the compounding advantage of monthly over quarterly is extremely overrated, the difference is really small and not worth the risk (yes most of these monthly payers are very risky leveraged garbage businesses) at all.
I like monthly ones more, of course, I love that consistency and it gives you way more opportunity to keep maximizing on it, plus so much more!!!!!!!!!
I bought some AGNC stock a few years ago. I got some dividends but the stock price is keeping on dropping and I lost quite some money on this. The dividends I received cannot cover the stock lost. So be careful when chose dividend stock. It should at least maintain its stock price before thinking about the dividends.
When you start investing, I think it’s better to have monthly dividend just because it will boost your self esteem after the first month. Even if the stock drop, you’ll be happy because you have receive your first quarter. Dividend investing rock 🤘🤩🤟
A mix is ideal because it allows you to compound your quarterly returns based on how you reinvest the dividend. The challenge is finding "safe" monthly payers. For bonus $$$ you can learn to buy strategic puts near ex dividend dates and earnings releases.
I think monthly vs quarterly dividends depends on what your goals are and which enables one best to reach them. I prefer monthly when possible because I like how evenly the return gets spread over the year. Completely psychological.
Well said Geoffrey. I think monthly has a big advantage for a lot of investors on that psychological aspect, the constant motivation of seeing dividends hit your account. Can be a real motivator to keep investing.
Just added these 6 to my portfolio. The question is what should the overall % be of all the stocks? 10%/20%/30%? What percentage should BND be? These are all great questions to think about.
It's a solid company and does well in this rate environment. Should hold up in a market drop and recession as well though I don't think you can expect same returns every year as we got in 2019. Good long-term cash flow stock though.
I have a combination of monthly quarterly and yearly dividends in my portfolio and try not to let any of them have to much power in my portfolio so that if something major happens again it doesn't crush my entire portfolio like the 2008 crash did
I personally love the monthly ones too because the way I have it set up is 3 of my monthly dividend paying REITS take care of my phone bill , car insurance and a few hundred dollars for gas and groceries. The rest is reinvested through DRIP. I live below my means btw , haha
raihan shaik I have SPHD for about 2 years now , and I also have GAIN and AGNC . Those 3 I use the dividend each month to pay some bills . All other REITS I have are GLAD , GOOD , PTY , and MAIN . Those I use the DRIP to re invest the dividends each month . I have a some videos as well in my channel . Thanks
@@exdividend7168 thanks for the info. I had some on my watch list. Defently going to buy those afyer research. How many stock do you have on the first 3 in order to get some decent money back?
@@FreshKicks4545 I have all the ones i mentioned in my portfolio , some may not have much growth as other but pay a bigger dividend , so if you are into REITS is always best to have a variety of a few good ones , not just one or 2 , So dont put all your money into just one just because it pays more. My strongest ones have been GAIN , GOOD , GLAD and STAG
I like both. My goal is to build up a steady stream of monthly retirement income. I have built a portfolio of quarterly payers with a pretty good balance of income per month. Now, I'm leaning toward monthly payers because I can add to their positions without having to rebalance the entire portfolio. Another thing I like about monthly payers is that they allow more frequent re-investment.
They are the same. The difference is psychological mostly. The monthly paying stock, fund, bond is harder to sell since it pays money immediately. The quarterly paying position pays more but less frequently. If one is tempted to sell a position its a difference of getting paid the dividend in 10 to 15 days for monthly payments. Or 1 to 2 months for quarterly. A person can justify keeping the position longer to collect the dividend coming in a few day for monthly vs a few months for quarterly.
Monthly dividend for compound interest and reinvestment. Also if a quarterly stocks cuts it for the month or longer that a minimum of 3+ month of no dividends.
Way more important to pick a good company. Why look past dividend kings, Aristocrats and contenders (etc) if you want income. Highest yield means highest risk. Avoid risk.
You should pick companies based on analysis, not how often their dividend is paid. That being said, companies that pay higher amounts less often are actually beneficial to me because my broker only offers a "synthetic DRIP". Meaning it can only buy full shares when reinvesting dividends. So the $ amount required to repurchase a full share is higher when a company pays dividends monthly vs quarterly.
Many of these stocks are heavily scalped for the dividend. This is reflected in the share price as buyers flock in to them before the ex-date and then cut the position as soon as the ex date has passed or shortly after. Stocks will sell off about the amount of the dividend depending on market direction and other factors. Something else to consider before you start watering at the mouth over all that free money, the dividend goes up and share price goes down and vice versa but understand that overtime many of these company's share prices do nothing and often go down as investors sap the value out of the company so that dividends aside you may not realize a gain on these stocks in the end. Dividends get cut and it usually happens when the price is already down. Worst of it is that if you look carefully on the cash flow statement for many "dividend paying" companies they frequently have to borrow the money to cover the dividend.
I owned a good chunk of LTC for awhile, but it's overvalued to me at the moment. Waiting for a dip to buy back in. I did make a nice capital gain on the sale. In the meantime my monthly dividend stock is VET and own quite a few quarterly dividend stocks!
@Berg's Corner, Yea, I'd like to see it double or more in price over the next year! It has such a high yielding dividend now which they could raise also
VET is a long term hold in my portfolio as well... it's taken a beating the last few years ..from 70 in 2014 to 18 now... but is rebuilding a base since hitting the 2009 low, and on big volume.... VET is held by many institutions.... another thing to consider when buying a stock, is who holds it.
The idea of monthly dividends is appealing, but tricky with reinvestment plan. I prefer quarterly payers, because the amount paid is enough to buy additional shares. The monthly payers send cash to my account, so it costs me on transaction fees to buy more shares. I own O, the only monthly payer.
@@josephhogue Thank you Joseph. I know, those are great! I invest from Europe, so our brokers need to catch up with this type of service. As soon as they do, I am jumping on this style. Unless I am super rich by then, and have enough in each company that even a monthly dividend pay out is so big that can buy me a whole share ;-)
I am brand new too the stock investments/Trade. I also have very little money compared to other individuals. I have found a lot of your videos very informative. Thanks for that! Just want you to know the in dept explanation on Stocks is very appreciative! My question; How much$/shares should I invest into one stock?
@@lordrazor3160 I'm not sure what fractional shares is. I have started 4 different platforms. Mainly because when I was looking for certain companies. Robinhood didn't have them. Now I wish I hadn't and tried to keep it to maybe 2.
@@pamelagunter4956 to me 4 seems like alot, if your just starting out and trying to build up a portfolio. You dont want to feel overwhelmed. I would research, stick with one you like. Build your confidence and learn. Dont get discouraged. If by example you use m1 and you have a stock that trades at $500 per share in your portfolio that you like and you set it to 20% meaning if you deposit $100, 20% will go towards that stock then you will be purchasing fractional shares of it since its trading above your deposit. Eventually you will have a full share and so on. Not sure if i would go that route at start but a lot of companies are low atm. Hopefully i explained that correctly.
Hey Mr. Hogue, I apologize in advance if this is off topic, but could you share your opinion about the monthly dividend-paying Global Water (GWRS)? Or have you covered this company in a previous video?
Early squad represent💪💪💪 Hi Joe. What stock do I need to get and how many share each to reach certain realistic goal such as 500-1000 dollars in dividends a month? I currently have 10k invested and auto deposit of 250 weekly. I’m currently holding KO 10 shares F 20 GM 5 WFC 10 PM 2 AGNC 30 PSEC 60 JWN 10 VZ 10 O 5 APPL 10 JNJ 10 T 10 TSLA 10
Focus on O and PSEC. These 2 pay monthly dividends. Build up so that you dividends are large enough to buy a whole share. And still keep the auto pay going. Hopefully you doing dividend reinvesting. I have a rule I follow. I neve buy stocks that don't pay dividends. I have portfolio of dividend pay paying stocks. I'm focusing on Gazorom now. I'm working on aquiring 1000 shares by July 2020. The stock pays an annual dividend of $.5/share. Then do it all over again in 2021. The dividendsxwill be used to pay for my oil heat in the winter season.
Thanks so much for your awesome investing videos, Joseph - they are so informative! What is your opinion on the monthly dividend stock AMZA - it’s an ETF of pipeline MLPs. Thanks for educating us!
If you space out quarterly payers right, you can still get paid monthly. I'm long on Realty Income (O) but have LTC, MAIN, and GAIN on my watchlist with others. I need to balance my portfolio with less REITs lol 😂
Dividends that pay monthly are a big benefit for those that are using there dividends to pay your bills (ex. light, gas, entertainment). I personally have AGNC and MAIN in my portfolio and few other monthly dividends. However, the stock investment that you mention are on my watchlist along with now BND that I will be investing in next month. Thanks +Joseph Hogue for posting this video and all the other helpful and informative vids.
I usually stay above $1.5 billion in market cap for the financial strength but it's no guarantee (i.e. TEVA and GE). Unless I'm specifically looking for small cap plays.
You can have good quarterly dividends and do the same thing, just have to divide it out! T is a great quarterly dividend stock. Get it now while it's fairly cheap!
What’s everyone’s thought about Redwood Trust (RWT)? It seems stable to me and gives a good dividend payout and continues to rise. Plus it’s a cheap stock and after this is over I know it can get its value back up.
@@ContrarianExpatriate payout ratio of 76.34%? Hmmm they're still making their payouts but I feel like it was over valued. Probably because of this video lol.
I was hoping you were going to have an opinion about monthly versus quarterly divided payouts. And does it make any difference if stay in a bear market? (June 2022)
Expense ratios tend to be on the high side but not too bad. I'd look into the portfolio to make sure they're diversifying across sectors and not just in BDCs, REITs and MLPs.
I own agnc and sbr also pdi, I never sell just buy more when they go down. I buy stocks when several yahoos recommend them, great strategy? I’m down about 5%. What do you think.
I love gain I have held their stocks for over 2 years and its one of my favorite stocks. They pay like 6.8 cents per share every month plus they do bonus payments a few times a year. they just did a bonus payment of 3 cents a share this month and in december they normally do like 2-3 bonus payments plus their normal payment.
@@tonymosley6951 next time the market does have a massive drop I intend to move everything into the stock market. But right now most of my money is sitting in high interest accounts.
I've got a video on that coming out 9/27 - short answer, yes a recession is coming but could be as much as a year before the market starts dropping. Can start repositioning in safety sectors now or just rebalancing assets for protection.
Ready to Invest? See how I got over $2,000 in free stock and bonus cash last year! 💰 ua-cam.com/video/5Tx0Ztrm0IY/v-deo.html
Hey what are your thoughts on EAD from Wells Fargo? I noticed that the price doesn't change much but pays around .07/share a month.
You're really good but I don't really understand what you're saying when give the analysis breakdown of why you should or shouldn't invest in stock or any other investment. I don't understand the cause and effect of how these companies work that you can invest in. Any suggestions to gain better understanding
What do you think about Redwood Trust (RWT)?
Have your companies changed since the inception of this video?
And if you had 700k to invest amd would like a monthly and quarterly dividend, how would you spread your funds?
2:00 LTC - Senior Housing & Healthcare
3:11 MAIN - BDC; Low and Mid Business development Co. Business funding
6:08 SBR - Oil & Gas
7:41 GAIN - BDC; Business development Co.
10:10 AGNC - Mortgage REIT
11:56 BND - Bonds
Monthly because I want that compounding to work faster
overrated how much faster its compunding vs quarterly, also montly payers have reverse compounding because of their dividend cuts
Monthly for 6 months because i just want to gain a few hundred $$$ short term
@@Demogrunt did you end up selling after 6 months? Genuinely asking
Great video Joseph. I have been doing a lot of research the last few months in dividend stocks for long term cash flow. To answer your question, I couldn't care if the dividend payment was monthly or quarterly. I want to see healthy fundamentals, positive CAGR, and the assurance the company won't go bankrupt during hard times. That way in 30 years we can still collect that cash flow!
Yup that’s a good look right der!!
Gotta love the monthly dividends!🤓
I'm long MAIN
LTC & GAIN on my watchlist
All other are new to me.
Thanks for the insight
I'm long in O, LTC, GAIN, had GAIN not sure to keep or not
he wears a bowtie, I can trust him
Tzion Talks lmfao
YOV KNOW THIS TO BE TRVE. 📣😎
LOL
As I always say; if he wears a bowtie, he can’t tell a lie : )
Monthly, because I'm looking for good picks that I can continue to get into over the years as a retirement income stock. Monthly payments are easier to manage and budget around than quarterly.
Also when manually reinvesting dividends you can react to trends and dips more effectively with a monthly payout. You may be missing opportunities between your quarterly payments.
Willam I totally agree
lol gladstone. I bought it when you first recommended it back in march or april, and thus far it has gained 15% in value not counting dividend. When the inverted rate scare happened, it was virtually unaffected.
I'm building a new portfolio with just monthly dividend payers. Right now it has APLE, STAG & EPR. I will be adding O in soon. I may add MAIN and LTC in at the beginning of the year. I like equity REITS because I understand how they operate. I think more of them should convert to monthly payers for people who want monthly income.
I am thankful to you for making this video. I like monthly payers at this moment. My motivation is, that I would like to live off my portfolio.
Great picks:main, gain,ltc,agnc,ltc
I'm a little weary on AGNC (but still have a stake in it) and agree 100% with your other choices. Good video.
Already owning half of the monthly payer that Joseph Hogue listed (MAIN, AGNC, and GAIN) has put a smile on my face. 😀
Yesss I have them too!
I'd feel safer with stocks that "won't let me down" with slightly lower yields. Some of the payout ratios were okay, but I don't know about the safety. Thanks for the suggestions at least.
Thanks for the information. I like share price growth more than dividends at this point. But I have to start a compound dividend portfolio simply because it grows itself.
I came here to learn how to trade after listening to a guy on radio talk about the importance of investing and how he made $460,000 in 4 months from $160k. Somehow this video has helped shed light on some things, but I'm confused about the current market volatility, I'm a newbie and I'm open to ideas.
Monthly Dividends -> Reinvest Dividends -> Compound Interest-> Retire Early
75% correct, quarterly instead of monthly and you're there
Monthly compound it faster assuming rates for rates.
@@mikeylovespizza4012 it makes little to no difference
@Tzion Talks all true, all i meant is quarterly stocks are way higher in quality over monthly payers generally, also the compounding advantage of monthly over quarterly is extremely overrated, the difference is really small and not worth the risk (yes most of these monthly payers are very risky leveraged garbage businesses) at all.
STN86 why you say that
I use monthly to build a base and quarterly to diversify.
I like monthly ones more, of course, I love that consistency and it gives you way more opportunity to keep maximizing on it, plus so much more!!!!!!!!!
I bought some AGNC stock a few years ago. I got some dividends but the stock price is keeping on dropping and I lost quite some money on this. The dividends I received cannot cover the stock lost. So be careful when chose dividend stock. It should at least maintain its stock price before thinking about the dividends.
Feels good to see you confirming what I have found by following your advice. Vindication is sweet!
Great video as usual, Would you do a video for 5 Canadian stock dividends ?
Good Idea!!!
How about Realty Income (o), the monthly dividend company?
Mr. your research is invaluable for people looking for a successful retirement strategy! Sir you're a valuable asset... thank you so much.
When you start investing, I think it’s better to have monthly dividend just because it will boost your self esteem after the first month. Even if the stock drop, you’ll be happy because you have receive your first quarter. Dividend investing rock 🤘🤩🤟
Yes that’s why I like some monthly’s in my portfolio.
yup and with those monthly dividends u can try out some penny stocks and potentially start getting into that
A mix is ideal because it allows you to compound your quarterly returns based on how you reinvest the dividend. The challenge is finding "safe" monthly payers.
For bonus $$$ you can learn to buy strategic puts near ex dividend dates and earnings releases.
Thank you Mr. Hogue for you extensive knowledge on the subject of dividend stock selection.
Why not both monthly and quarterly dividends,
I think monthly vs quarterly dividends depends on what your goals are and which enables one best to reach them. I prefer monthly when possible because I like how evenly the return gets spread over the year. Completely psychological.
Well said Geoffrey. I think monthly has a big advantage for a lot of investors on that psychological aspect, the constant motivation of seeing dividends hit your account. Can be a real motivator to keep investing.
Just added these 6 to my portfolio. The question is what should the overall % be of all the stocks? 10%/20%/30%? What percentage should BND be? These are all great questions to think about.
Thank you sir :always loofrwart your Analysis
Great review of these monthly paying stocks and the ones I see most commonly in the portfolio of dividend investors
A quarterly dividend one that was great for my portfolio in 2019 is Compass Diversified, CODI.
Will have to take a look. Never heard of it. What do you like about them?
Yep !
GAIN appears to be a solid growing small cap company. The share price is moving the right direction and their top line revenue covers the dividend.
It's a solid company and does well in this rate environment. Should hold up in a market drop and recession as well though I don't think you can expect same returns every year as we got in 2019. Good long-term cash flow stock though.
Great video, thanks!
I prefer monthly payouts
because most of the bills come at that time.
For me monthly as I plan to reinvest every cent and I believe that it will compound a little faster, seems to me that way.
I'm surprised GOOD didn't make this list; you recommended in an older video. I own shares in GOOD and GAIN. Both are solid monthly dividend payers.
nimravus01 agree with you. He stopped suggesting GOOD for some reason.
Honesty, investing is easy.
Now, finding the money to invest; thats the real problem 😂
Athear Nasery my problem is the other way around lol
Try to cut all the expenses that you do not need. Spend less than you make. That's the trick.
Every time you get paid just dump as much money into your savings lol
@@Ari-lu5ve Great. Compounding is like a snowball. So if you always reinvest it. It will grow. Good luck.
@@Ari-lu5ve bad time buddy
I have a combination of monthly quarterly and yearly dividends in my portfolio and try not to let any of them have to much power in my portfolio so that if something major happens again it doesn't crush my entire portfolio like the 2008 crash did
I personally love the monthly ones too because the way I have it set up is 3 of my monthly dividend paying REITS take care of my phone bill , car insurance and a few hundred dollars for gas and groceries. The rest is reinvested through DRIP. I live below my means btw , haha
Love it when dividends pay the bills!
Please share which one is those 3 monthly stock u have and how long u have it since??..and also r u still inveating in to those stoks??
raihan shaik I have SPHD for about 2 years now , and I also have GAIN and AGNC . Those 3 I use the dividend each month to pay some bills . All other REITS I have are GLAD , GOOD , PTY , and MAIN . Those I use the DRIP to re invest the dividends each month . I have a some videos as well in my channel . Thanks
@@exdividend7168 thanks for the info. I had some on my watch list. Defently going to buy those afyer research. How many stock do you have on the first 3 in order to get some decent money back?
@@FreshKicks4545 I have all the ones i mentioned in my portfolio , some may not have much growth as other but pay a bigger dividend , so if you are into REITS is always best to have a variety of a few good ones , not just one or 2 , So dont put all your money into just one just because it pays more. My strongest ones have been GAIN , GOOD , GLAD and STAG
I like both. My goal is to build up a steady stream of monthly retirement income. I have built a portfolio of quarterly payers with a pretty good balance of income per month. Now, I'm leaning toward monthly payers because I can add to their positions without having to rebalance the entire portfolio. Another thing I like about monthly payers is that they allow more frequent re-investment.
Earning dividends are great. Thanks for sharing this rundown on these stocks Jospeh! 👍
They are the same. The difference is psychological mostly. The monthly paying stock, fund, bond is harder to sell since it pays money immediately. The quarterly paying position pays more but less frequently. If one is tempted to sell a position its a difference of getting paid the dividend in 10 to 15 days for monthly payments. Or 1 to 2 months for quarterly. A person can justify keeping the position longer to collect the dividend coming in a few day for monthly vs a few months for quarterly.
Monthly dividend for compound interest and reinvestment. Also if a quarterly stocks cuts it for the month or longer that a minimum of 3+ month of no dividends.
Part of the dividend from AGNC is a return of capital.....so last I looked, roughly half of their payout is truly a dividend.
Your videos are so informative. Great content.
I really love your show you teach me alot thx
"Bounce more than an NBA star on crack!"... Now that had me laughing pretty hard.
These monthly payers can be brutal sometimes. I think I was having withdrawals when I wrote this up. New season starts Oct 22nd!!!!
Why agnc and not nly? Great video. Appreciate it!
Great information/video and I love monthly dividend
Gratz on 100k dude
Way more important to pick a good company. Why look past dividend kings, Aristocrats and contenders (etc) if you want income. Highest yield means highest risk. Avoid risk.
You should pick companies based on analysis, not how often their dividend is paid. That being said, companies that pay higher amounts less often are actually beneficial to me because my broker only offers a "synthetic DRIP". Meaning it can only buy full shares when reinvesting dividends. So the $ amount required to repurchase a full share is higher when a company pays dividends monthly vs quarterly.
Great vid. Cant beat the monthly compounding!
Many of these stocks are heavily scalped for the dividend. This is reflected in the share price as buyers flock in to them before the ex-date and then cut the position as soon as the ex date has passed or shortly after. Stocks will sell off about the amount of the dividend depending on market direction and other factors. Something else to consider before you start watering at the mouth over all that free money, the dividend goes up and share price goes down and vice versa but understand that overtime many of these company's share prices do nothing and often go down as investors sap the value out of the company so that dividends aside you may not realize a gain on these stocks in the end. Dividends get cut and it usually happens when the price is already down. Worst of it is that if you look carefully on the cash flow statement for many "dividend paying" companies they frequently have to borrow the money to cover the dividend.
Good point. Yielding stocks and bonds (and REITs) have all been bid up this year on the search for cash flow.
I owned a good chunk of LTC for awhile, but it's overvalued to me at the moment. Waiting for a dip to buy back in. I did make a nice capital gain on the sale. In the meantime my monthly dividend stock is VET and own quite a few quarterly dividend stocks!
VET is doing good with oil surging!
@Berg's Corner, Yea, I'd like to see it double or more in price over the next year! It has such a high yielding dividend now which they could raise also
VET is a long term hold in my portfolio as well... it's taken a beating the last few years ..from 70 in 2014 to 18 now... but is rebuilding a base since hitting the 2009 low, and on big volume.... VET is held by many institutions.... another thing to consider when buying a stock, is who holds it.
Monthly dividends, starts compounding over time grows faster figuring ups and downs of the market similar to dollar cost averaging.
Would love to see a 2020 covid version of this
Id prefer monthly as its easier manage and can reinvest it quicker
The idea of monthly dividends is appealing, but tricky with reinvestment plan. I prefer quarterly payers, because the amount paid is enough to buy additional shares. The monthly payers send cash to my account, so it costs me on transaction fees to buy more shares. I own O, the only monthly payer.
Smart thinking. Might try M1 Finance or one of the other free apps (Robinhood and Webull are free also) to reinvest without the fees.
@@josephhogue Thank you Joseph. I know, those are great! I invest from Europe, so our brokers need to catch up with this type of service. As soon as they do, I am jumping on this style. Unless I am super rich by then, and have enough in each company that even a monthly dividend pay out is so big that can buy me a whole share ;-)
Monthly. So they can't wait to close to pay to cut or reduce dives. Plus mo payers allow you to invest in stocks monthly.
I don't care if I'm paid monthly or Quarterly.. Right now, I'm Dripping them anyway..!
Quarterly or monthly doesn't matter to me because I am ok on budgeting
Thanks for the analysis. Interesting picks!
I am brand new too the stock investments/Trade. I also have very little money compared to other individuals. I have found a lot of your videos very informative. Thanks for that! Just want you to know the in dept explanation on Stocks is very appreciative! My question; How much$/shares should I invest into one stock?
Im no expert amd just started an m1 account. I started with lower stock prices to build share count for dividend earnings then worked up from there.
@@lordrazor3160 Thank you
Forgot to mention m1 finance allows you to buy fractional shares. Robinhood has it in works
@@lordrazor3160 I'm not sure what fractional shares is. I have started 4 different platforms. Mainly because when I was looking for certain companies. Robinhood didn't have them. Now I wish I hadn't and tried to keep it to maybe 2.
@@pamelagunter4956 to me 4 seems like alot, if your just starting out and trying to build up a portfolio. You dont want to feel overwhelmed. I would research, stick with one you like. Build your confidence and learn. Dont get discouraged. If by example you use m1 and you have a stock that trades at $500 per share in your portfolio that you like and you set it to 20% meaning if you deposit $100, 20% will go towards that stock then you will be purchasing fractional shares of it since its trading above your deposit. Eventually you will have a full share and so on. Not sure if i would go that route at start but a lot of companies are low atm. Hopefully i explained that correctly.
Hey Mr. Hogue, I apologize in advance if this is off topic, but could you share your opinion about the monthly dividend-paying Global Water (GWRS)? Or have you covered this company in a previous video?
Early squad represent💪💪💪
Hi Joe. What stock do I need to get and how many share each to reach certain realistic goal such as 500-1000 dollars in dividends a month? I currently have 10k invested and auto deposit of 250 weekly.
I’m currently holding
KO 10 shares
F 20
GM 5
WFC 10
PM 2
AGNC 30
PSEC 60
JWN 10
VZ 10
O 5
APPL 10
JNJ 10
T 10
TSLA 10
Great question. Video last Friday on some of my picks and how many to buy ua-cam.com/video/GnAuLqO6bfs/v-deo.html
Focus on O and PSEC. These 2 pay monthly dividends. Build up so that you dividends are large enough to buy a whole share. And still keep the auto pay going. Hopefully you doing dividend reinvesting. I have a rule I follow. I neve buy stocks that don't pay dividends.
I have portfolio of dividend pay paying stocks. I'm focusing on Gazorom now. I'm working on aquiring 1000 shares by July 2020. The stock pays an annual dividend of $.5/share. Then do it all over again in 2021. The dividendsxwill be used to pay for my oil heat in the winter season.
Thanks so much for your awesome investing videos, Joseph - they are so informative! What is your opinion on the monthly dividend stock AMZA - it’s an ETF of pipeline MLPs. Thanks for educating us!
Dividend tax just killed my profits. Being a non resident I need to find a way around it or I have to stick with capital gains instead.
Joseph is an amazing person. Love ❤️ his professional marine corps professionalism...and he like red label Budweiser!! Oooraw !!!
Hi joseph, can you please list all stocks in one slide by the end of every videos, so that we can easily pick .. Thanks
If you space out quarterly payers right, you can still get paid monthly.
I'm long on Realty Income (O) but have LTC, MAIN, and GAIN on my watchlist with others.
I need to balance my portfolio with less REITs lol 😂
Dividends that pay monthly are a big benefit for those that are using there dividends to pay your bills (ex. light, gas, entertainment). I personally have AGNC and MAIN in my portfolio and few other monthly dividends. However, the stock investment that you mention are on my watchlist along with now BND that I will be investing in next month.
Thanks +Joseph Hogue for posting this video and all the other helpful and informative vids.
great Video!!! thank you!
I have a mix of both, but I have mostly quarterly, but monthly have incresed a lot as a percentage of my dividend portfolio. What about PSK?
Y’all got this all wrong, monthly divs into quarterly divs and vice versa. It’s just a plan I have, but I’m almost certain that will entirely work.
Thank you for putting out this super helpful info. Learning a lot as a new investor.
love your vids!
I like the idea of monthly dividends in a retirement account because of compounding.
Love it. and tax-deferred compounding!
This video is good however current market conditions these investments risky
Monthly dividend because it’s a close pay , when dividend hits sooner dividend starts making money faster
Hello! what do you think about Apple dividends? I will like to know.
They've got enough cash that they'll never have to cut. Solid dividend though I'm not a fan of the high stock price right now.
Do you ever consider Market Cap when analyzing potential stock safety/strength?
I usually stay above $1.5 billion in market cap for the financial strength but it's no guarantee (i.e. TEVA and GE). Unless I'm specifically looking for small cap plays.
I like monthly as I want to use my monthly dividends to help towards monthly mortgage payment.
I think monthly is the way to go. Everyone that charges the little guy wants their money mothly: utility bills, phone bills, rent, cable, etc.
You can have good quarterly dividends and do the same thing, just have to divide it out! T is a great quarterly dividend stock. Get it now while it's fairly cheap!
Love these videos and I'm long on the bowtie!
Surprise not see sphd ,it have been one the most consistent and a good pay out monthly
Thanks Joseph, Semper Fi
ooh rah sister!
What’s everyone’s thought about Redwood Trust (RWT)? It seems stable to me and gives a good dividend payout and continues to rise. Plus it’s a cheap stock and after this is over I know it can get its value back up.
Love ltc! I also really like epr and o!
Do you still love it even though it absolutely tanked since you posted that comment?
@@ContrarianExpatriate payout ratio of 76.34%? Hmmm they're still making their payouts but I feel like it was over valued. Probably because of this video lol.
ContrarianExpatriate no it hasn’t
I was hoping you were going to have an opinion about monthly versus quarterly divided payouts. And does it make any difference if stay in a bear market? (June 2022)
Monthly so Bill's can be paid.
Would it be a bad time for me to buy another index fund to hold long term? Thank you!
Might take some losses on a selloff but if it's a long-term hold then I think you can buy each month to DCA and be happy
@@josephhogue so should I wait for the next crash?
What are your thoughts on monthly dividend ETFs? I also like, DES, DON and DIV...
Expense ratios tend to be on the high side but not too bad. I'd look into the portfolio to make sure they're diversifying across sectors and not just in BDCs, REITs and MLPs.
SPHD, ANGL both awesome. Pay 4-5% monthly, good diversification
how about inflation on the mortgage reits? also agnc buys the mortgages at a premium so if the mortgage get instantly repayed they lose money
I own agnc and sbr also pdi, I never sell just buy more when they go down. I buy stocks when several yahoos recommend them, great strategy? I’m down about 5%. What do you think.
I love gain I have held their stocks for over 2 years and its one of my favorite stocks. They pay like 6.8 cents per share every month plus they do bonus payments a few times a year. they just did a bonus payment of 3 cents a share this month and in december they normally do like 2-3 bonus payments plus their normal payment.
What is your thought on PSEC stock for dividend play?
I have been hearing a lot of talks about a recession. Do you think now would be a good time to invest in the stock market?
You could wait till the markets go really down 15%+ to get in at a cheaper price. We are due for a recession, the markets can't go up forever.
@@tonymosley6951 next time the market does have a massive drop I intend to move everything into the stock market. But right now most of my money is sitting in high interest accounts.
I've got a video on that coming out 9/27 - short answer, yes a recession is coming but could be as much as a year before the market starts dropping. Can start repositioning in safety sectors now or just rebalancing assets for protection.
Would you do a video on BDC's?