Posts Tagged ‘dividendgrowth’

This Lady Turned $180 Stock Investment Into 7 Million Dollars!

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

030610gronerjpg_20100306_09_37_01_18h116w165Thought this was an interesting article on Ms. Grace Groner who bought 3 shares of Abbott Labs in the 1930’s and never sold any. She reinvested the dividends allowing her wealth to compound over time, and that it did to the tune of 7 million Dollars with only an initial outlay of $180 dollars. This just goes to show powerful dividends and compounding are over time. Below is the original article for your viewing.

Grace Groner was an uncommonly wise and generous person. She died in January and is still teaching us lessons.

Groner was 100 when she died, and she willed her estate to Lake Forest College. She lived in Lake Forest, one of the wealthiest communities around, so you’re probably thinking she was a dowager, maybe the last in some line of old money. Groner was much bigger than that.

She had never married and lived penuriously in a tiny house in a part of town once reserved for servants’ quarters. Groner graduated from Lake Forest College in 1931 with a degree in English and went to work at Abbott Laboratories (ABT), where she stayed 43 years and became the president’s secretary.

In the 1930s, the young woman bought three shares in Abbott costing $60 each. She was thinking ahead. She never sold the shares, which split many times over the years and paid dividends that she reinvested. At her death, that $180 was worth $7 million, and it became the largest gift in her alma mater’s history.

Groner had set up a foundation for the college, declared its mission and specified how it would be run. The college said her gift will generate about $300,000 annually that it will use for scholarships, especially for students interested in studying abroad.

Pastor Kent Kinney of First Presbyterian Church in Lake Forest said travel was one indulgence Groner allowed herself. This was a woman who didn’t have a car, wore second-hand clothes and didn’t even buy the home she lived in; she rented an apartment for years and got the house in a friend’s will. In turn, she has donated the house to the college for use as a residence by Groner Scholars.

Kinney said she took many trips after her retirement from Abbott and believed in the broader outlook that travel bestows. She also believed costs should not bar someone from pursuing knowledge or a dream. Kinney said Groner volunteered for years at his church and would send gifts anonymously to local residents through her attorney.

Investing in Abbott probably was an act of faith, like much of what she did. Her success invites two observations, one of which unfortunately mars this uplifting tale: Don’t try what she did.

It is a grave error to put your nest egg behind a single company, and it is worse when the company is your employer. Groner had a winner, but others have done this with Enron, General Motors or Bear Stearns. Joseph Scanlon, senior managing director for investor advisory services at Mesirow Financial and not involved in Groner’s account, said clients shouldn’t place more than 10 percent of their money into a single source, especially if the cash is for a future need such as retirement or college expenses.

But Groner’s endowment shows the value of dividends and reinvesting them, part of the magic of compounding interest. Her $7 million would represent ownership of more than 129,000 Abbott shares, based on the current price. Groner got there simply by reinvesting the dividends and reaping the splits from her holdings.

Abbott is one of the all-time great dividend performers, part of the aptly named S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats index. The company said it has paid a dividend since 1924 and increased it annually for the last 38 years.

This is where Groner the stock picker shines. Abbott said that since her first purchase in the mid-1930s, it has split its shares 13 times, most often by two-to-one ratios. The last split was in 1998, meaning the company’s overdue. But purely on those splits, Groner’s three initial shares would become 19,353 shares.

The value of those is about $1 million. The additional $6 million comes from the reinvested dividends that built her holdings to the level that stunned her college. People just don’t appreciate the power in those quarterly payouts.

Scanlon said long-term studies of the S&P 500 say it produces annual returns of 8 percent to 11 percent with reinvested dividends. Without them, the average annual return is 4 percent to 5 percent, he said.

Despite the risk of her eggs-in-one-basket approach, Scanlon said Groner obviously knew what she was doing by not tapping her Abbott wealth and living modestly off other sources of income. And he said her devotion to Abbott contrasts with the flightiness of most investors. “It’s more likely that people buy a stock and if nothing happens in a year, they sell,” he said.

Sound but unspectacular companies often escape Wall Street’s alert system, he said. “If the business is good, eventually you’ll get your reward,” he said.

Groner passed her reward to others, the final testament in a wonderful life.

This Article via The Chicago  Sun-Times

BY David Roeder

Relevant Articles:

15 Large Cap Dividend Stocks

4 Stocks With Rising Dividend$

4 Stocks With Rising Dividend$

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

Below is a screen I ran this morning on dividend stocks. This screen seeks to identify quality companies that have a history of good dividend growth and that also have an additional kicker: their shares are sporting above-average yields. All four are ranked A or better by Standard & Poor’s Investor service. All four have grown their dividends at double digits over the last 5 years.

The Strategy for owning/investing in dividend stocks
Cash dividends are tangible. They can’t be fabricated, or falsified, or manipulated. Over time, dividends are a true record of a company’s performance. They can also represent a significant proportion of an investment’s total return. Since 1926, dividends have accounted for almost 42% of the total return (capital appreciation plus reinvested dividends) of the S&P 500. The attraction of a safe, secure dividend, moreover, will help to support and cushion a stock when the market is going through bad times and is under downward pressure.
picture-9
Company Name Ticker Symbol S&P Rank (earnings/div. rank) Dividend Yield Dividend Growth Rate(5 yr avg) Trailing P/E Current Ratio
VF Corp VFC A 3.4% 17.81% 14.9 2.3
Johnson & Johnson JNJ A+ 3.24% 11.45% 13.4 1.8
Sysco Corp SYY A+ 3.72% 13.05% 14.5 1.7
Emerson Elec Co EMR A 3.47% 10.53 15.6 1.5

An ETF Quandary: Dividend Yield Or Dividend Growth?

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

ETF dividendsA prudent way to save up for the future has many investors putting their wealth into dividend-paying stocks and related exchange traded funds (ETFs). But an investor may wonder if he or she should be investing in dividend yield or dividend growth.

Stocks operating with high dividend yields could have recently experienced a drop in share prices or be an “out of favor” money maker, remarks ETF Guy for ETF Topics. A company could have also raised its dividend in the past and can be considered a dividend growth stock.

In a hypothetical situation, a dividend yield investor sees a 13.0% yield for a stock and a dividend growth investor sees a stock with 2.0% yield and an average annual dividend growth rate of 10.0%. It is calculated that the dividend yield stock will start paying out 5.0% in 10 years. But a dividend yielding stock does allow an investor to receive some extra money on a regular basis.

Investors utilizing dividend yield stocks have an opportunity to use higher dividend profits to either retire or grow an investment portfolio. Dividend growth stocks may not provide enough for retirees.

When investing into dividend stocks or ETFs, it is important to have your own strategy in place for the time frame you have in mind. ETF Guy thinks the obvious solution is to have a balanced investment in both dividend yield and dividend growth type stocks, but every investor is different. Consider your own goals and needs.

  • SPDRS (SPY): yields 2.7%; up 0.8% year-to-date

ETF SPY

  • PowerShares International Dividend Achievers (PID): yields 3.4%; up 8.6% year-to-date

ETF PID

  • PowerShares Dividend Achievers (PFM): yield 2.9%; down 9.0% year-to-date

ETF PFM

  • iShares Dow Jones Select Dividend Index (DVY): yield 5.5%; down 13.5% year-to-date

ETF DVY

Created by Tom Lydon

Max Chen contributed to this article.