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Top Shelf Financial Stocks? - Printable Version +- Dividend Growth Forum (https://DividendGrowthForum.com) +-- Forum: Dividend Growth Investing (https://DividendGrowthForum.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=15) +--- Forum: Individual Dividend Growth Stocks (https://DividendGrowthForum.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=35) +--- Thread: Top Shelf Financial Stocks? (/showthread.php?tid=1327) Pages:
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RE: Top Shelf Financial Stocks? - Dividendsrule - 09-05-2015 I have been nibbling on PBCT over the last year or so. Yield over 4%, and they kept raising the dividend through the recession. Clearly, dividend growth has been low since 2009, but with rising rates, they may stand to make more money and raise more. Bank branches are in affluent states; Connecticut, southeastern New York, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine. RE: Top Shelf Financial Stocks? - Roadmap2Retire - 09-05-2015 (09-04-2015, 10:18 PM)crimsonghost747 Wrote: Like rayray said you should set your eyes on Canadian banks for this one. I consider them to be much more conservative than the US banks. I did quite a bit of research on them and decided to go with CIBC (CM.TO) but many people on this forum own others too. So definitely worth reading about them, roadmap2retire has some good articles about them in Seeking Alpha. Thanks for the shoutout crimsonghost747 ![]() RE: Top Shelf Financial Stocks? - Kerim - 09-05-2015 (09-05-2015, 11:16 AM)rapidacid Wrote:(09-05-2015, 08:09 AM)Kerim Wrote: BEN's yield is very interesting -- very low if you consider only the regular dividends, but much more exciting if you factor in the special dividends that they are fond of paying. Of course those are not predictable, but in the years that they've been paid, it can more than double the "regular" dividend. Nice analysis -- Thanks Rapid! What's got me going about BEN right now is that with the recent price decline, it is the highest rated stock in my scoring system -- and that is completely ignoring the special dividends! The P/E is nice and low, they sit on a ton of cash, and even after 35 years of consecutive (regular) dividend increases, the payout ratio is around 15 percent. Factoring in the special dividends would increase the payout ratio, of course. But really that is the beauty of their approach. They keep a lot of powder dry to reward patient shareholders with those special payouts. Of course they are facing some headwinds. The continued popularity of indexing and the emergence of robo-advisors / fintech could put pressure on their AUM and the fees they can collect. And when the market is more volatile as it has been recently, people might flee the markets. But generally it is a very lucrative business they are in! If it drops much lower, I might be backing up the truck on this one. (09-05-2015, 01:33 PM)Dividendsrule Wrote: I have been nibbling on PBCT over the last year or so. Yield over 4%, and they kept raising the dividend through the recession. Clearly, dividend growth has been low since 2009, but with rising rates, they may stand to make more money and raise more. Thanks for the reminder about this one. A trusted source recommended PBCT to me a while back, but I haven't taken a close look in a long time. RE: Top Shelf Financial Stocks? - EricL - 04-25-2017 Ameriprise Financial announced a 10.7% dividend and a $2.5B expansion to its share repurchase program yesterday along with an earnings beat. I wrote up a little post about the news if you are interested in reading: Ameriprise Financial: Boosting Dividends And Shrinking Shares RE: Top Shelf Financial Stocks? - Forticus - 05-12-2017 rapidacid, thanks for the div info on BEN. I skipped BEN for the low regular dividend. My "collection" of financials is now RY.TO, TD.TO, WFC, BLK and BRK.B with a sector allocation of 14%. I like that sector but do not want to overdiversify. I wonder whether it maks sense to hold two or three stocks of the same industry in the core of the portfolio. Here "core" as opposed to "supporting" or "speculative" stocks, as some DGIs name their second and third row stocks. |