06-21-2021, 03:26 PM
(06-21-2021, 02:13 PM)ken-do-nim Wrote: Okay, so I believe then these are the DGI companies I have (yield in parens):
- MO - 7.43%
- KMI - 6.12%
- RIO - 5.73%
- ABBV - 4.60%
- IBM - 4.58%
- STX - 3.14%
- AVGO - 3.13%
- WEC - 3.03%
- XEL - 2.75%
- LMT - 2.74%
- TXN - 2.23%
- HII - 2.20%
- HD - 2.18%
Then there's a bunch below 2%: L3Harris, Lowe's, Oracle, Starbucks, Taiwan Semiconductor, Target, Sherwin Williams. If you count them too I'm at 20.
Very nice. You got the meaning
Dividend Growth Investing (DGI) is a form of investing in which you only buy stocks which have raised their dividend year after year, without fail, for at least the last 5-years in a row. In many cases the companies have raised their dividends for the last 10, 25, even 50 years in a row, or more. So A DGI stock is pretty much means that you invest in a set of dividend-paying stocks that grow their dividend payout year after year.
So STX does not count.