mit said:Rozella,
I thought I noticed the same thing, but when I tried to backtest a simple system (Entry 25 days before div date with a bullish filter). I got the following results for the average annual return from 1998.
Days before ex-div date % Annual return
1 23%
2 21%
3 19%
However the return by selling on the open of the ex-div day is 25%. This is not including the Franking credits.
MIT
Milk Man said:Hey dude,
A few questions.
-what leverage involved (any)?
-whats the bullish filter?
-why is the sky blue?
rozella said:My opinion (not advice) if you are using CFD's, is to sell prior to exdiv, maybe 2 days before, as a lot of international traders dump the day before exdiv, as they are not entitled to the franking credits.
As I said, this is my opinion, & my observation.There is no data to support this view. There is in fact a positive bias on the cum-div day.
I think we all know that.If you are using CFDs to div strip you have rocks in your head. The key part of the div strip is the 'stripping' of the franking credits away from the cash div. There are no FCs with a CFD so there is nothing to strip.
It would be a smoother rise. The dividend income would be similar, but the trading profits would be greater.I wonder Rozella what your equity chart would look like if you simply invested on margin during a bull run......I suspect the majority of profit is from being leveraged into a massively rising market, and NOT from some div phenomenon.
rozella said:Some of the forecasted dates the companies have actually published, but they always have a disclaimer & are subject to change. We really can't be sure until they announce, but they should be good to within a few days, depending on weekends etc.
crashy said:ghoti
due to the 45 day rule for franking credits, there is often buying occuring for 45 days before the div, and selling for 45 days afterward. Smart investors buy 45 (47) days before the div, and sell ex-div day. Amateurs buy on the cum-div day and sell 45 days later.
Of course this assumes the stock would otherwise be stable, which rarely happens. generally its best to buy ex-div when overall market sentiment is positive.
rozella said:Bought TCL today @ 680.0 with a margin of 70%
Investment 204.0/share
Exdistribution 23rd December, distribution 24.5/unit, zero franked.
If you own CBA i.e. $20,000, this is your investment, so you can "mortgage" for want of a word, with your CBA as security. The lender will allow you to use 75% of the last price or ask price, whichever is the lower, for whatever you want it for......you can take it out if you want to.so, if you already owned $20,000.0 of CBA shares you could borrow say $15,000.0 against this holding (75% lending ratio)
Although we may buy 1000 TCL @ 680.0 = $6800 we only need to invest 30% because the marginlender puts up the other 70%, so our investment is $2040 & we borrow $4760 with TCL as security. It is just like buying real estate.and you have bought TCL at 680.00/share and I assume paying the full price for the share, ie. if bought 1000 shares would cost $6,800.0
rozella said:G'day robots,
Although we may buy 1000 TCL @ 680.0 = $6800 we only need to invest 30% because the marginlender puts up the other 70%, so our investment is $2040 & we borrow $4760 with TCL as security. It is just like buying real estate.
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