A new list that I am concentrating right now is the S&P 1500 dividend achievers. These are companies that have increased their annual dividend payments for at least 10 consecutive years.
I created custom watch lists in Yahoo! Finance in order to summarize the two groups of dividend achievers by a variety of criteria such as Symbol, Yield, P/E , Div/Shr, Last Price,EPS (ttm) ,PEG Ratio ,Dividend Payout. What I did was first exclude any stocks which had a dividend payout ratio of more than 50%. That gives me some reasonable assurance that the company is less likely to cut its dividends.
I also look at P/E ratios, since I do not want to overpay for a company. Anything with a P/E of over 20 is out of my watchlist.
I also check the PEG ratio but just to find stocks which might be expensive in terms of their growth prospects.
A third criteria that I look for is a dividend yield of at least 2%, which is a little bit over than the current yield of 2.00% that SPY is rewarding its shareholders.
The last but not least criteria that I screen for is the 5 dividend growth ratio. I am looking for an average annual dividend growth of at least 5% over the past 5 years. I didn't include the dividend growth rate in this screen though.
The reason why I selected dividend growth in the end is because I want to decrease to a minimum the rush to buy a stock that simply increased its dividend for whatever reason, whose fundamentals cannot support any significant further increases in the dividend payments.
I would continue screening for potential stocks to add to my buy watchlist on a monthly basis. I might add or remove stocks from my watchlist depending on how undervalued/overvalued I perceive them to be. If I stock in which I have a position drops off my buy watchlist, I would keep holding it, but I won’t be adding to that position until the technical’s and the fundamentals match my criteria.
Based off of this screen, here is my stock lists that I follow (you could also open it in google documents here).
This article appeared in Carnival of Personal Finance #150 , hosted by Lazy Man.
Relevant Articles:
- Dividend Growth Stocks Watchlist
- Five Year Dividend Growth Rates for the High-Yield Dividend Aristocrats
- My Current Watchlist
- Diversification and portfolio allocation
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Popular Posts
-
As an investor, I am aware that I have a lot of blind spots. Someone with a glass half full outlook on life might say that I have a lot of r...
-
Dollar cost averaging is a process, where the same amount of funds is allocated to preset investment/s at regular intervals of time. It is ...
-
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway just received a dividend check for $194 million dollars from Coca-Cola. Berkshire Hathaway owns 400 mil...
-
I review the list of dividend increases as part of my monitoring process. This exercise helps me monitor existing holdings. It also helps me...
-
The Dow Jones U.S. Dividend 100 Index is designed to measure the performance of high-dividend-yielding stocks in the U.S. with a record of c...
-
The Procter & Gamble Company (PG) provides branded consumer packaged goods worldwide. It operates through five segments: Beauty; Groomi...
-
I review the list of dividend increases every week, as part of my monitoring process. This exercise helps in monitoring existing positions a...
-
I review the list of dividend increases every week, as part of my monitoring process. This exercise helps me monitor existing holdings but a...
-
One of my favorite charts shows a listing of eleven consumer goods companies, and the brands that they own. It reinforces my belief that str...
-
A pattern of steady dividend payments and dividend increases is only possible if a business can generate enough cashflows to support operati...