Great video, there is no better time to be a dividend investor than right now while all these stocks are falling in share price and the value is now all there!!!!
Everyone preaches you have to sell to survive especially in retirement. Dividends over time makes that difference, you’re screwed with most retirement plans
JNJ and PG are two of our Foundation stocks and I also own PFE as well. We own the two companies and love them. I've been buying 1 share of JNJ every week. Clearly Kevin and I are on the same page :) Great video. Thanks for putting it together.
I'm not a fan of Kevin O'leary but he is right about owning dividend paying stocks in my opinion. Why would you own a stock that has no return to investors? You shouldn't in my opinion.
Technically it could mean the company is using all of the cash flow to reinvest into the business to expand their growth. AMZN, GOOG, TSLA, DIS. I know DIS has stated they want to reinstate dividends and TSLA I believe mentioned he’d eventually want to pay dividends. I only own DIS,AMZN,GOOG,TSLA as my non dividend payers just due to the growth potential over the next 30 years.
@@jbrockskill That is typically a waste of money in many cases. The same with buy backs. Cash dividends are the way to reward investors, management does a very poor job in most cases when they have excess funds to allocate. The only way to make any money with non-dividend payers is to play the bigger sucker way of trading and selling of your stock. With dividends you get to keep owning the stock while getting paid and enjoying the growth of the company.
@@rd9102 hmm… I would think those companies listed will continue to grow over the next 30 years but I agree that dividend stocks are better, hints why the vast majority is dividend stocks/ETFs. I do see some people invest into non paying no name stocks just to attempt at timing the market and I find that a bit insane compared to investing into a company like TSLA, AMZN, GOOG, or DIS for the long run.
@@jbrockskill Figure the odds that more than 1 of those companies lasts in its current form for the next 30 years. The odds are not on that happening but anything is possible. Furthermore looking at their valuations and how incredibly high and out of whack with reality they are i wouldn't look for much growth in the value of those companies. As i said anything is possible, i mean TSLA was trading at 1200 P/E 2 years ago and now it's only trading at roughly 102 P/E...still ridiculously expensive given the long term market (s&p500) is 15-16 but like i said, anything is possible and i wish you luck on holding them. They are not for me for the reasons i have outlined and more but i do hope they work for you the way you want them too.
I just grabbed 100k from my house and tossed 75 into some divs and used 25 to do some updates. That chunk is going to not only cover the extra mortgage payment, it's going to bring in 200 extra bucks a month over and above PLUS my house updates are essentially free money.
Schd is paying 90 cents per share. You had 75k. That would be 1000 plus share. 1000×.90= $900.00. You invested in a wrong stock. Plus this is a monthly ETF
Very good video and I agree 100% with Kevin O'leary. I avoid all stocks that don't pay a dividend because I see dividend payouts kind of like money insurance.
why i sold. nearly all growth stocks. *exceptions being tesla which takes 82% of portfolio anyhow* and just building up quality companies to get dividend
Good video thanks :) I'm tempted to put half in DGRO and half in SCHD and call it a day. Much lower expense ratio than OUSA and higher yield 2.85% (combined DGRO and SCHD) vs about 2%. Same type of stocks too. DGRO has tech, SCHD doesn't. I agree on MSFT; it belongs in every divi portfolio. Anyone that doesn't want MSFT has probably never even glanced at their balance sheet.
I like the idea of how the companies were picked for OUSA but in reality OUSA has underperformed VOO over the long term and the expense ratio is much higher than more popular funds…VOO, SCHD, etc.
If your time for following the market and analyzing stock is limited, this is definitely a good auto pilot strategy. It allows you to focus on your career and saving money on the things you need to buy.
The shareholder has already paid company tax on the profit that the company has made, when they get a dividend they have to then pay more tax on the profit which is double taxation of the same profit, that's one reason why some shareholders don't like to get a dividend. When the dividend gets paid the stock price will then fall because the company then has less assets and new shareholders won't get the dividend.
Agree, it’s so simple yea it takes longer to grow but it a safe growt over time and ur stress free investing into dividend stocks. Got my first 1000$ by not working for it and that’s a good feeling
There are some pure growth stocks that have beat the crap out of any dividend stock. Apple, for example, didn’t pay a dividend for years, until recently. I made more money on that stock, than probably all my dividend stocks, combined! With dividend stocks, you pay taxes on the dividends each year. You pay no tax on growth stocks until you sell them, and then under current tax laws, there’s no tax on capital gains if you’re in a certain income category. If you do have to pay tax on your capital gains, they are less than what you would pay on dividends. Those are the reasons you want to own some growth stocks.
Great video, wich info in the spreadsheet do you enter manually? I'm interested to know more about this, if possible ofcourse, many thanks in advance. The Dutch Guy
he said '' I can't imagine why I am buying a stock that doesn't pay dividend '''.. Someone has to ask Kevin O 'learry --why he bought BABA and META which both companies doesn't pay dividend ..
But how does OUSA compare to SHCD? Does OUSA do any rebalancing? You know clean out the underperformers so that ALL his holdings are divi/growth winners?
What is a primo portfolio? % wise? I ask because I do not need to complicate. I want crockpot stocks-fix it & forget it! Any thoughts? I ask because I love a lot of indi companies. But I can't invest in all of them. I want the IT stock, health sector, consummables P & G. Is there an index fund with just 15 holdings? 20? I love MSFT AMAZN, BRK-B, JNJ. You know what I mean? I need to find an easier way to put this in my brokerage account. Dollar cost averaging maxed-out. Thank you!@@Dividendology
A dividend is just a forced sale of your shares... to dumb it down, if your company pays out 1% of assets, the market cap goes down by 1%, meaning you own the same % of a smaller company, that lost % is givin to you in cash... its healthy to sell over time as companies grow, but not nessisary, a dividend is just a reverse drip
Hi, Great video again! But i was wondering how does it work with copyrights on the clips you use from parts off the videos from kevin? Are they not copyrighted? Would love to know about this
Australian companies pay out a large proportion of their profit in dividends because the shareholder gets a tax credit for the company tax that has been paid on that profit.
Agree 3.2% plus dividend. 104 ish stocks. diversify with this dividend ETF from Charles Schwab. Im 60% SCHD 40% VTI just two Efts. about80%. Then some stocks 20%. currently 8 stocks.
With the exception of Desktop Metal (DM), Markforged (MKFG), Tesla (TSLA), and Zillow (Z), which I bought for fun, all of my stocks pay dividends. BYW, Tesla is the only one that hasn't gone down.
Agreed. Dividend paying stocks are preferred. However, I would not otherwise take advice from Kevin ever since I bought a low priced stock touted by him about a year ago. It dropped in value immediately, and kept dropping until I sold it at a loss. Will not be putting any money into anything he recommends again.
@@__Ryan_ Bought: Wonderfi Technologies (WONDF) OTC, Vancouver on 11/23/21 @2.089. Sold it at a loss on 12/2/21 @1.75 to cut my losses before it dropped even more.
Dividends should be tax free because company tax has already been paid on the profit and the shareholders own the company so they have already paid tax on the profit.
All this is nonsense, especially OUSA yielding 2% and management taking 0.5% cut. Why buy dividend stocks when you can get 4%+ yields from U.S. treasuries of almost any duration without risk and extra taxes? If you follow O'Leary's investments you can see that he is a liar and just wants to promote his ETF.
Great video, there is no better time to be a dividend investor than right now while all these stocks are falling in share price and the value is now all there!!!!
Everyone preaches you have to sell to survive especially in retirement. Dividends over time makes that difference, you’re screwed with most retirement plans
JNJ and PG are two of our Foundation stocks and I also own PFE as well. We own the two companies and love them. I've been buying 1 share of JNJ every week. Clearly Kevin and I are on the same page :)
Great video. Thanks for putting it together.
He's a good person to be on the same page with!
@@Dividendology Amen!! Your next video should be the Top 5 Dividend Stocks in the Dividend Diplomats' portfolio :)
I'm not a fan of Kevin O'leary but he is right about owning dividend paying stocks in my opinion. Why would you own a stock that has no return to investors? You shouldn't in my opinion.
Technically it could mean the company is using all of the cash flow to reinvest into the business to expand their growth. AMZN, GOOG, TSLA, DIS. I know DIS has stated they want to reinstate dividends and TSLA I believe mentioned he’d eventually want to pay dividends. I only own DIS,AMZN,GOOG,TSLA as my non dividend payers just due to the growth potential over the next 30 years.
@@jbrockskill That is typically a waste of money in many cases. The same with buy backs. Cash dividends are the way to reward investors, management does a very poor job in most cases when they have excess funds to allocate. The only way to make any money with non-dividend payers is to play the bigger sucker way of trading and selling of your stock. With dividends you get to keep owning the stock while getting paid and enjoying the growth of the company.
@@rd9102 hmm… I would think those companies listed will continue to grow over the next 30 years but I agree that dividend stocks are better, hints why the vast majority is dividend stocks/ETFs. I do see some people invest into non paying no name stocks just to attempt at timing the market and I find that a bit insane compared to investing into a company like TSLA, AMZN, GOOG, or DIS for the long run.
@@jbrockskill Figure the odds that more than 1 of those companies lasts in its current form for the next 30 years. The odds are not on that happening but anything is possible. Furthermore looking at their valuations and how incredibly high and out of whack with reality they are i wouldn't look for much growth in the value of those companies. As i said anything is possible, i mean TSLA was trading at 1200 P/E 2 years ago and now it's only trading at roughly 102 P/E...still ridiculously expensive given the long term market (s&p500) is 15-16 but like i said, anything is possible and i wish you luck on holding them. They are not for me for the reasons i have outlined and more but i do hope they work for you the way you want them too.
Berkshire Hathaway
Totally agree. If someone is not paying you to invest in something, it is simply not worth investing.
Berkshire Hathaway doesn't pay a dividend and i got zero issues purchasing that company.
I just grabbed 100k from my house and tossed 75 into some divs and used 25 to do some updates. That chunk is going to not only cover the extra mortgage payment, it's going to bring in 200 extra bucks a month over and above PLUS my house updates are essentially free money.
Schd is paying 90 cents per share. You had 75k. That would be 1000 plus share. 1000×.90= $900.00. You invested in a wrong stock. Plus this is a monthly ETF
@@neilprasad7093 It's quarterly, and hovers around 60 cents (last 63). You need better info.
@@fendermon Ooookoohohohokhohh
@@butwhole4186 Try again?
@@neilprasad7093 SCHD is not monthly, but it does have a nice distribution percentage. The OP invested the $75k the exact way he wanted to.
Very good video and I agree 100% with Kevin O'leary. I avoid all stocks that don't pay a dividend because I see dividend payouts kind of like money insurance.
put dividend stocks in my roth ira for sure!
why i sold. nearly all growth stocks. *exceptions being tesla which takes 82% of portfolio anyhow* and just building up quality companies to get dividend
Good video thanks :) I'm tempted to put half in DGRO and half in SCHD and call it a day. Much lower expense ratio than OUSA and higher yield 2.85% (combined DGRO and SCHD) vs about 2%. Same type of stocks too. DGRO has tech, SCHD doesn't. I agree on MSFT; it belongs in every divi portfolio. Anyone that doesn't want MSFT has probably never even glanced at their balance sheet.
It is hard to beat SCHD and DGRO!
@@Dividendology Thanks
I like the idea of how the companies were picked for OUSA but in reality OUSA has underperformed VOO over the long term and the expense ratio is much higher than more popular funds…VOO, SCHD, etc.
If your time for following the market and analyzing stock is limited, this is definitely a good auto pilot strategy. It allows you to focus on your career and saving money on the things you need to buy.
The shareholder has already paid company tax on the profit that the company has made, when they get a dividend they have to then pay more tax on the profit which is double taxation of the same profit, that's one reason why some shareholders don't like to get a dividend. When the dividend gets paid the stock price will then fall because the company then has less assets and new shareholders won't get the dividend.
Agree, it’s so simple yea it takes longer to grow but it a safe growt over time and ur stress free investing into dividend stocks. Got my first 1000$ by not working for it and that’s a good feeling
Makes me feel good with MSFT as my largest holding
MSFT is my largest individual holding as well. Love them long term for dividend growth.
My largest position by far -- 331 shares.
Wow! That's awesome.
@@Duke_of_Prunes Oh my god… what’s your average price per share? I only have 14.59279 shares(yes, every decimal counts!).
@@jbrockskill My average is $17 and change. I began buying years ago.
What’s your recommendation if you invested into dividends stocks but then canceled them to build more cash flow ?
For example : CCL & PLAY
What about REIT investing for dividends???
I'll make a video on this soon!
@@Dividendology definitely looking forward to it!
When did Kevin O'Leary do this interview? Great video, but wondering how long ago he was in these stocks
The allocation for the stocks in this video are up to date (as of the time of the video release). They are from his dividend ETF, OUSA.
I find it funny that his ousa etf doesn't pay dividends you only get dividends from the companies in the etf
There are some pure growth stocks that have beat the crap out of any dividend stock. Apple, for example, didn’t pay a dividend for years, until recently. I made more money on that stock, than probably all my dividend stocks, combined!
With dividend stocks, you pay taxes on the dividends each year. You pay no tax on growth stocks until you sell them, and then under current tax laws, there’s no tax on capital gains if you’re in a certain income category.
If you do have to pay tax on your capital gains, they are less than what you would pay on dividends.
Those are the reasons you want to own some growth stocks.
What's your view on having a large % of your portfolio in dividend King's vs tracker funds like Voo/vusa (in UK) as market so choppy? Thanks
Great video, wich info in the spreadsheet do you enter manually? I'm interested to know more about this, if possible ofcourse, many thanks in advance. The Dutch Guy
check out the tutrorial video: th-cam.com/video/cPelW-8C-74/w-d-xo.html
he said '' I can't imagine why I am buying a stock that doesn't pay dividend '''..
Someone has to ask Kevin O 'learry --why he bought BABA and META which both companies doesn't pay dividend ..
Happiness is free cash flow.
Free cash flow is everything!
Does O’Leary reinvest those dividends or take the cash?
But how does OUSA compare to SHCD? Does OUSA do any rebalancing? You know clean out the underperformers so that ALL his holdings are divi/growth winners?
I personally like SCHD more.
What is a primo portfolio? % wise? I ask because I do not need to complicate. I want crockpot stocks-fix it & forget it! Any thoughts? I ask because I love a lot of indi companies. But I can't invest in all of them. I want the IT stock, health sector, consummables P & G. Is there an index fund with just 15 holdings? 20? I love MSFT AMAZN, BRK-B, JNJ. You know what I mean? I need to find an easier way to put this in my brokerage account. Dollar cost averaging maxed-out. Thank you!@@Dividendology
A dividend is just a forced sale of your shares... to dumb it down, if your company pays out 1% of assets, the market cap goes down by 1%, meaning you own the same % of a smaller company, that lost % is givin to you in cash... its healthy to sell over time as companies grow, but not nessisary, a dividend is just a reverse drip
How's FTX Kevin?
falling stock price and more price drops to come in 2023 with 2.5 -3 % dividend yield and 8% inflation is a recipe for serious erosion of capital
Hi,
Great video again! But i was wondering how does it work with copyrights on the clips you use from parts off the videos from kevin? Are they not copyrighted?
Would love to know about this
Look up fair use laws :)
@@Dividendology thanksss will do
J&J pays a dividend that does not beat inflation? Why does that make it a good investment? Tesla no div and I did 100x
Hi does your excel spreadsheets work in other tickets for other countries?
Hi! The google spreadsheet works for some international stocks, but not all. I’m working on a solution that will work for all stocks.
You’re making great content lately. I’m glad to say you’ve earned my sub before you hit 100,000 subscribers. It’ll get here before you know it.
Thank you! I’ve been watching your channel for a long time! I’m a fan!
@@Dividendology I’m making a couple videos on dividend now. Keep me in mind if you want to collab on something.
I’m definitely open to that!
Please include metrics that tells payout per share for each one of these so that one can compare investment vs payout.Thanks!!
The stock valuation spreadsheet I use does have that data! Check it out sometime!
@@Dividendology Check it out sometime... kinda sounds rude
@@darbabylovesprince my apologies if I sounded rude. in fact your video is truly vary informative, thank you for fruitful efforts.
no apology necessary! Im glad you enjoyed the video! :)
Can you do blackrock?
I'll add that to my list of videos to make!
I’m confused. I thought a higher dividend yield percentage was a good thing
it depends! It can be good at times, but it could also be a sign that a companies dividend payouts might not be sustainable.
Better yield s in treasuries and CD’s.
Can you cover Seagate?
I’ll have to add that to my list of videos to make.
Traders love volatility, dividend stocks don't have enough volatility for traders.
Australian companies pay out a large proportion of their profit in dividends because the shareholder gets a tax credit for the company tax that has been paid on that profit.
If Kevin loves dividends so much, why did he invest in crypto?
Diversification
Price of stocks will go down even further.. I'll wait.
just buy SCHD done
Agree 3.2% plus dividend. 104 ish stocks. diversify with this dividend ETF from Charles Schwab. Im 60% SCHD 40% VTI just two Efts. about80%. Then some stocks 20%. currently 8 stocks.
Looks like good advice. Thanks!
I guess people of Kevin’s means is not concerned with Canadian dividend tax credit. These are all USA stocks.
My understanding is that he owns Tesla.
Contradiction of everything he said here.
He bought it later after his son went to work there. He explains it in another video. Views Tesla as a tech company rather than an auto play.
@@JohnsFishTales thank you
With the exception of Desktop Metal (DM), Markforged (MKFG), Tesla (TSLA), and Zillow (Z), which I bought for fun, all of my stocks pay dividends.
BYW, Tesla is the only one that hasn't gone down.
Johnson and johnson looks good
Great video!
So I guess he doesn’t hold Berkshire Hathaway.
He loves royalties more than dividends, for that reason I'm out...
Saw this video a LONG time ago.
Agreed. Dividend paying stocks are preferred. However, I would not otherwise take advice from Kevin ever since I bought a low priced stock touted by him about a year ago. It dropped in value immediately, and kept dropping until I sold it at a loss. Will not be putting any money into anything he recommends again.
What stock?
@@__Ryan_ Bought: Wonderfi Technologies (WONDF) OTC, Vancouver on 11/23/21 @2.089. Sold it at a loss on 12/2/21 @1.75 to cut my losses before it dropped even more.
Looks like you cut your losses. It’s now selling at 0.1838.
@@mmabagain Thanks for the update.
BKCC 😉
Blax eye grails
A yield of 2.05% in OUSA? No thank you
This is they guy who is accused of pushing crypto. How much did Kevin lose??????
Great video my man 👍
Thanks Ryan!
Make a cheaper price video ,dividends
Thanks!
Wow! Thank you!
Dividends should be tax free because company tax has already been paid on the profit and the shareholders own the company so they have already paid tax on the profit.
VZ .. no good
but it pays a nice dividend@ 6+% ...stop thinking wireline...it's a mobile phone company now
Great video. Great analysis. LIKE 714#
Then, he buys Tesla
JNJ
OUSA dividend yield 1.8%🤣
Maybe Kevin needs to sell those stocks to pay off his FTX LOSSES AND LEGAL SUITES!
How much did Mr. Wonderful lose with FTX again? 🤣
You dont own a stock that doesn't pay dividends you're renting it. When you make money off of it you sell it. Look at it that way.
🐂🐂🐂
How come not 3M? Just wondering...Any comments/answers with regards why not will be appreciated guys thank you
Lawsuits and more lawsuits.
3m will continue to drop for a while. But once the lawsuits are finished and it seems nothing else is coming that's the point in the dip to buy.
stay far away from 3m man. until these lawsuits blow over.
Thank you all appreciate your feedback and info
All this is nonsense, especially OUSA yielding 2% and management taking 0.5% cut. Why buy dividend stocks when you can get 4%+ yields from U.S. treasuries of almost any duration without risk and extra taxes? If you follow O'Leary's investments you can see that he is a liar and just wants to promote his ETF.
BlaBlaBlaBla, he's a wanabe Buffett.
Crook👈🏾👈🏾
Only a fool takes Cramer or Learys advise, as a fool is easly parted with thier money!