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Clean energy Dividend 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: Clean energy Dividend stocks (/showthread.php?tid=1825) |
Clean energy Dividend stocks - dhcruz67 - 01-07-2019 Looked into these and I like: VWDRY NEE EQM These look sustainable with great growth potential. Let me know what you think. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk RE: Clean energy Dividend stocks - fenders53 - 01-08-2019 I'll check them out. I am in NEE and several others here are as well. I like my utility companies to be making a move towards the future. The clean stocks can be tricky due to politics (i.e. dependence on subsidies). The wild swings in crude can cause extreme stress on a clean energy balance sheets. Entry point is often everything. Take a look at a 20 year chart for VWDRY. You could have a ten bagger lately, or much earlier on it would have been a a 95%+ loss and wait 15yrs to get half your capital back. Same story with a number of wind and solar startups. Step one for me is trying to figure out who will even survive the first 5-10 years as the tech evolves beyond the experimental stage. RE: Clean energy Dividend stocks - Otter - 01-08-2019 Consider BEP as well. All Hydro, Wind, Solar assets spread across North and South America (primarily USA, Canada, Colombia, and Brazil). Limited Partnership, so issues K-1s (but TurboTax Premier has never had an issue with it). 9 years of dividend growth history, averaging 6.4% annual growth over the past five years, and 7% current yield. Next raise should be announced soon, before the March 31 distribution payment. Clean energy Dividend stocks - dhcruz67 - 01-08-2019 Thank you. I will look into that one Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Clean energy Dividend stocks - dhcruz67 - 01-08-2019 (01-08-2019, 06:22 AM)fenders53 Wrote: I'll check them out. I am in NEE and several others here are as well. I like my utility companies to be making a move towards the future. The clean stocks can be tricky due to politics (i.e. dependence on subsidies). The wild swings in crude can cause extreme stress on a clean energy balance sheets. Entry point is often everything. Take a look at a 20 year chart for VWDRY. You could have a ten bagger lately, or much earlier on it would have been a a 95%+ loss and wait 15yrs to get half your capital back. Same story with a number of wind and solar startups. Step one for me is trying to figure out who will even survive the first 5-10 years as the tech evolves beyond the experimental stage. Thank you Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |