Dividend ETF

  

Categories: Investing, Stocks

A dividend ETF is an ETF (exchange-traded fund) that’s invested in stocks that pay out high dividends (some money paid regularly, usually quarterly, from a company to its shareholders). Not all stocks pay dividends, but some do—and if you’re wanting to live the dividend life, a dividend ETF is an excellent way to go about it.

Okay, back, back, back it up...what’s an ETF again?

ETFs are kinda like mutual funds, except ETFs track a certain index or group of different securities (which mutual funds only sometimes do). How does that work? Well, ETFs are passively managed, since they’re just following an index (think: algorithms that tinker with the giant basket of stocks every once in awhile), which makes the expense ratios (the fee you pay for whoever is managing the ETF for you) super low.

For instance, you could invest in the dividend ETF called ALPS Sector Dividend Dogs (SDOG). Snoop Dogg—-errr, SDOG—tracks an equal-weighted index of the five highest-yielding securities in the S&P 500 in each sector, and is rebalanced every quarter.

Dividend ETFs mean you can be raking in the dividends while paying minimum expense ratios, all the while staying balanced (since it’s an ETF). Oh yeah, and ETFs are better than mutual funds come tax-time, offer lower minimum investment requirements, and are more transparent.

Cool? Cool. See: ETF. And then WTF.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is the Dividend Discount M...2 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop what is the dividend discount model Well

00:07

it's a technique used to value companies or at least

00:11

it wass in the stone age And yet in the

00:14

nineteen fifties maybe which basically says that a company's value

00:17

is fully contained in the cash dividends it distributes back

00:22

to invest doors This model is only useful really for

00:25

its historical relevance We we just don't use that much

00:28

these days Yeah back in the old timey cave man

00:30

days when there was essentially no research of real merit

00:33

being done on the performance of investments of whatever flavor

00:37

the dividend discount model was the best thing investors had

00:40

to value an investment in a company And remember in

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those days companies paid rial dividends that were a meaningful

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percentage of the total value of the company Unless so

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a company pays a dollar a share this year in

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dividends Historically it's raised dividends at about three percent a

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year like paid a dollar last you'd expect two dollars

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three next year in dollars six and change the next

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so well The dividend discount model discounts backto present value

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And yes we have an opus on what president value

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Means but here's the logline definition present value of all

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future cash flows discounted for risk in time Back to

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cars Yeah that thing well a few odd things are

01:18

worth noting in this horse and buggy era formula The

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dividend discount model ignores the terminal or end value of

01:25

the company Like say twenty years from now the company

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is sold for cash The dividends are all that are

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really focused on though in our model that seem strange

01:34

to you Well maybe But let's say the discount rate

01:37

is ten percent in the risk free rate is four

01:40

percent for a total of fourteen percent a year discounted

01:43

back to the present So doing the math just looking

01:45

at the terminal value of say a hundred million bucks

01:47

in a sale to be made twenty years from now

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Let's figure out what that's worth today Well you take

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the one point one four Put it to the twentieth

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power to reflect twenty years of discounted valuation compounding And

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you say one point one four forty twenty powers about

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thirteen point seven So to get the present value of

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one hundred million bucks twenty years from now using this

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discount rate Will you divide the hundred million by thirteen

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point seven and that means that the one hundred million

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dollars twenty years from now today is worth only seven

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point three million bucks And yeah that's ah big haircut

02:20

kind of like this guy Well the formula focuses ah

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lot on near term dividend distribution and it's Really more

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interesting is a relic of original financial research in theory

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than anything directly useful today And if you find this

02:33

interesting while then we may have a gig for you

02:36

here at shmoop finance central Yeah come on down We 00:02:39.715 --> [endTime] need writers good ones not like me

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