My Dividend Portfolio: I Like Beer 6 comments
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As I might not have time later this month, and because Anheuser-Busch (BUD) was bought by InBev (INBVF.PK) for $70 a share, I decided to update the Buy and Hold Forever Dividend Portfolio. This and all future updates will be posted here. The spreadsheet tracking the portfolio is available on the original post and here.
I didn't think BUD would be bought at all. And if it were bought, I didn't think it would happen so soon. I said in the original portfolio rules that if a holding was bought for cash, that would count as a dividend. That feels like cheating somehow now that it's actually happened. Should BUD be replaced by Molson Coors (TAP)?
The original criterion for including stocks in the portfolio was that they are dividend paying household names. Now that BUD is gone, and I like beer so much that all brewers are equally familiar to me, I don't really know what brewer to put in its place. International companies will probably have a bigger dividend payout, but they are much harder to track. Moreover, for many investors it can be difficult to buy stocks on the international markets. The best replacement, in my opinion, would be the new company Anheuser Busch-InBev, which trades in Brussels. Rather than having a headache doing currency conversions and tracking the daily price, however, I prefer to replace BUD with TAP, if it is replaced at all. (InBev trades on the Pink Sheets too, but the dividends are difficult to track.) (If BUD's replaced, $350 will be used to buy TAP. The rest, somewhere over $40, will count as a dividend.)
There is a poll addressing this question that you can find here. It closes on December 1.
In addition to updating the spreadsheet for the dividends received so far, I've added "Share Price Value" and "Share Price Return." This is just to keep track of the great Ponzi scheme known as the stock market. Since we're keeping the stocks forever, "Total Dividend Return" is the preferred measure. You'll notice that the "Share Price Return" is currently greater than the "Total Return," which incorporates dividends. You'll also notice that the dividend return is negative. That's because commission costs were counted as dividends when the portfolio was started (it started with a negative one percent return). Over time, "Total Return" will be greater (and hopefully positive!) than "Share Price Return."
Here are the dividends received so far (ex div dates used):
3M (MMM)
19-Nov-08 $ 0.50 Dividend *5.443 = 2.7215
AFLAC (AFL)
17-Nov-08 $ 0.24 Dividend *7.904 = 1.89696
Boeing (BA)
5-Nov-08 $ 0.40 Dividend *6.677 = 2.67
Chevron (CVX)
14-Nov-08 $ 0.65 Dividend *4.692 = 3.0498
Church & Dwight (CHD)
6-Nov-08 $ 0.09 Dividend * 5.923 = 0.533
Con Ed (ED)
7-Nov-08 $ 0.585 Dividend * 8.079 = 4.726
Duke Energy (DUK)
12-Nov-08 $ 0.23 Dividend *21.368 = 4.9146
Du Pont (DD)
12-Nov-08 $ 0.41 Dividend *10.924 = 4.4788
Enbridge (ENB)
12-Nov-08 $ 0.282 Dividend *10.116 = 2.852712
Exxon Mobile (XOM)
7-Nov-08 $ 0.40 Dividend *4.722 = 1.8888
Intel (INTC)
5-Nov-08 $ 0.14 Dividend *21.834 = 3.05676
Microsoft (MSFT)
18-Nov-08 $ 0.13 Dividend *15.674 = 2.03762
Overseas Shipholding (OSG)
5-Nov-08 $ 0.438 Dividend *9.313 = 4.079
Pfizer (PFE)
5-Nov-08 $ 0.32 Dividend *19.763 = 6.32416
Target (TGT)
18-Nov-08 $ 0.16 Dividend *8.724 = 1.39584
United Technologies (UTX)
12-Nov-08 $ 0.385 Dividend *6.368 = 2.4517
Wells Fargo (WFC)
5-Nov-08 $ 0.34 Dividend *10.279 = 3.49
Disclosure: At the time of writing, I owned WFC.
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This article has 6 comments:
www.dividendgrowthinve...
On Nov 23 05:51 PM Dividend Growth Investor wrote:
> If you are a fan of alcohol stocks, have you considered Diageo (DEO)
> as a global dividend play?
>
> www.dividendgrowthinve...
12-Nov-08 $ 0.282 Dividend *10.116 = 2.852712
You show a dividend payment of $0.282 per share. Their website shows a payment of $0.33 per share. Why the difference?