đ¸ 10 Yields You Should Know
Today is Dividend Day.
The series where I teach you 5 things about dividend investing in less than 5 minutes.
1ď¸âŁ 10 Yields You Should Know
Dividend yield isnât the only yield you should know.
In fact, if you're only looking at the dividend yield⌠youâre missing the full picture.
Gross profit, EBIT, and Earnings Yield all tell you about the profit of the business.
Free cash flow yield, buyback yield, shareholder yieldâŚ
These arenât just numbers. Theyâre signals.
Signals that a company might be quietly returning a fortune to its investors â even if the headline dividend seems small.
So before you chase the next fat dividend check⌠here are some other yields that matter too.

2ď¸âŁ Donât Just Look at Yield
Sure, dividend yield tells you what youâre getting paid right now.
But what else matters?
How fast that paycheck is growing - Dividend Growth.
Take a look at the companies in this chart.
Theyâve raised their dividends for at least 10 straight years.
And theyâre growing those payouts by 6% a year â or more.
At 6%, your yield doubles in 12 years.
At 8%, it only takes 9.
Reinvest your dividends â or just keep saving â and it happens even faster.

3ď¸âŁ An Investing Quote
John Maynard Keynes put it simply:
Investing is judging an assetâs lifetime yield.
Speculating is guessing what others will pay tomorrow.
Dividend investors should know the difference.
Weâre not chasing trends.
Weâre building income by owning businesses that will last.
âInvesting is an activity of forecasting the yield over the life of the asset; speculation is the activity of forecasting the psychology of the market.â
- John Maynard Keynes
4ď¸âŁ A Simple Dividend Strategy
Savita Subramanian is Bank of Americaâs Head of U.S. Equity Strategy & U.S. Quantitative Strategy.
Sheâs was also named one of the 100 Most Influential Women in U.S. Finance by Barronâs.
She offered up an interesting Dividend Investing Strategy on the Meb Faber show:
Divide the Russell 1000 into quintiles by Dividend Yield
Buy the second-highest yielding group - this avoids most of the distressed stocks with prices that are rapidly falling in quintile 1
Repeat monthly
It involves more trading than our style at Compounding Dividends, but according to Ms. Subramanian, over time it offers the highest total return with the lowest percentage of negative years in terms of percentage of losses.
The Wall Street Journal backtested the strategy using information from Hartford Funds and found that a $1,000 investment in the S&P 500 or its predecessor made in 1930 would have grown into $8.6 million through last year.
An investment in the second quintile of stocks by yield would have grown to $31 million!
The link to the podcast episode is above. Click on the image to see the WSJ article.
5ď¸âŁ Example of a Dividend Stock
For todayâs example of a Dividend Stock, weâll use one included in the Russell 1000.
Graco (GGG) is a leading manufacturer of fluid handling systems and products, specializing in equipment for the construction, automotive, and industrial sectors.
Examples of their products include paint sprayers, fluid transfer pumps, and pressure washers.
Profit Margin: 22.7%
Forward PE: 27.9x
Dividend Yield: 1.4%
Payout Ratio: 36.7%
Thatâs it for today!
Used sources
Interactive Brokers: Portfolio data and executing all transactions
Finchat: Financial data