It hit the stoploss & was sold 17th October on the exdividendwatchlist portfolio @ 1754.0 & yes, we will re-enter if the opportunity arises.Thanks very much for sharing Rozella,
I saw that your ZFX hit your stop loss, are you planing to re-enter?? I am weighing it up atm.
Well today I decided to give it a shoot, I got 2500 ZFX @ $17.64 and as Rozella was saying “commonsense must prevail”, so I have a very loose stop atm. Now my question is as a general rule does the share price drop as a % of the dividends like below?
70cent dividends
say ex dividends date SP =17.70
70cent is %3.9 of 17.70 = 0.6903
Therefore you would expect it to drop to ~17.0097
Profit from dividends = $1750
$44100(2500@ $17.64)-$42525(2500@ $17.01)
=-1575
Profit pre fees= $175
So is it sometimes wise to sell before the ex dividends date and just be happy with SP of $18+??
Once again I am new to this so be nice…
can anyone tell me what XTSXOS means? i take it its something to do with after hours trading?? looks like a big order when through and how come the price level is 17.609??
Yes I am....both with marginlender & CFDs....so far very good.thanks for the update Rozella, are you holding WES WESFARMERS??
The basis of my strategy is 'The lure of the dividend, gives a stock a reason to rise'Can Anyone please tell me as to the problem with riding the increase of a stock as it nears its dividend payment.Do all stocks go up as it nears its ex-divodend? I do not wish to receive a dividend but only ride the stock value increase (the last week say)....Thankyou
Church man
Sorry if this question has been answered already. The percentage listed as Dividend Yield is, as I understand, the percentage of yield based on a 12 month average of the SP.
If Dividend Stability is listed as being 100% or close, does this mean that we could expect the same percentage of SP being maintained - even if, for example, the SP doubles?
I guess the above question has an obvious answer - what I am really wanting some feedback on is people's experience on dividend returns growing or declining without reinvesting into said stock.
I have generally not worried too much about dividends, concentrating more on capital gains on SP changes - but just got struck on the head with thinking about the percentage of return based on SP. If we have a good growth stock then the percentage gain in Dividend value would be growing based on the SP rising.
So an initial investment of $10,000 now, with a dividend yield of 5% would be $500. Next year if the SP were to double (for arguments sake) the yield would still be 5%, which would be a return of $1,000 - so in effect, without additional investment my yield would actually be 10% on my original $10,000
mmmm, this makes dividend hunting a little more interesting...
any comments? Good or bad
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