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Latest | Highest ratedTop Foreign Dividend Stocks Traded in New York [View article]
On Aug 31 04:46 PM Menachem Ben Yakov wrote:
> Lloyds TSB pays a 12.91% (TTM) dividend at an ADR/Share price of
> $22.05.
> Many folks err in computing the dividends on U.K. banks because they
> pay variable dividends. The computer generated stock screens take
> only a multiple of the last dividend paid and don't compute the yields
> properly.
> There is no substitute for pencil and paper and the writer should
> double check his facts before publishing incorrect information.
Islamic Banking in America? [View article]
In fact while HSBC does a great deal of business in the Arab world it is also a member bank of The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange and maintains offices in Israel.
One can only wish that those involved in the diplomatic process were as astute as HSBC in bridging the gap between cultures.
Dividends Show Differences Between Financials [View article]
Since 1927, dividends have
contributed over 44% of the total
return of the S&P 500 Index,
with pure capital appreciation
accounting for less than one
third of total return and if those same dividend
payments had been reinvested, dividends would
account for over two
thirds of total return over the
same time frame.
On Aug 31 04:11 PM Leser wrote:
> I agree with jimsep and Menachem Ben Yakov.
> When purchasing a stock, look for the reasonable payout of -- what
> 25% or 50%, ballpark figure -- profits to the stockholder in the
> form of dividends (not so much buybacks, which I suspect may be to
> makeup for all the stock thrown at the executives of the company
> to cover their raiding the profit cookie jar.)
> It's old fashioned fiscal responsibility at running the business
> the company says it's in. Buying other companies should be judiciously
> done, not in a greedy way to spend the shareholders' money, as if
> the shareholder doesn't know what to do with it. He or she should
> use the dividends to buy more of the same stock. If the company is
> that good, the shareholder probably would.
> Of course, companies with high dividends and high debt--well the
> debt washes out the benefit of the current dividend, I would say.
>
> Yes, if we went back to the traditional high dividends--even after
> a 15 (or 20% taxation in the future?), it would be one way to know
> the executives of the company are really working for us. What a
> novel thought.
> Dividends, dividends, dividends. The proof is in the pudding.<br/>
>
Top Foreign Dividend Stocks Traded in New York [View article]
Many folks err in computing the dividends on U.K. banks because they pay variable dividends. The computer generated stock screens take only a multiple of the last dividend paid and don't compute the yields properly.
There is no substitute for pencil and paper and the writer should double check his facts before publishing incorrect information.
Dividends Show Differences Between Financials [View article]
Great article and should be read by every investor.