Oct 3 2009

Best Dividend Investing Posts of the Week – October 3, 2009


Best Dividend Investing Posts

Not the best week in the market and certainly a change from what we have seen over the past couple of weeks. That is ok. We need these to keep things real and not out of whack.

Once again, here are some of the articles and posts about dividend investing I found especially useful this week.

Many of these are straight from member of Dividend Investing and Value Network (DIV-Net). I hope you can learn a little bit more about dividend investing from all of these articles, as I continue to do each and every week.
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  • Survivor’s Bounce About Over
  • 10 Dividend Stocks for the Enterprising Investor
  • DRiP: Pengrowth Cuts Distributions
  • The return of the financial dividends
  • Dividend Payer’s Return Lags Non Payers
  • 7 Dividend Stocks Paying More Cash
  • Will There Be a Correction?
  • The Aftermath of a Birth of Plenty
  • In Value Stock Investing, Quality is Job One
  • 3 dividend stocks with high free cash flow
  • The case for global dividends, sporting yields of at least 3%
  • Companies Raising Dividends
  • 3 Reasons Why Investing in the Top Dividend Paying Stocks is NOT a Good Idea
  • SYSCO Corporation Stock Analysis – Priced to Buy
  • Did the tide of falling stock dividends turn in the third quarter?
  • (Photo Credit)


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    2 Comments on this post

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    1. The Rat said:

      Nice post. I was totally bummed out from Pengrowth’s continued reduction in distributions. A total disappointment.

      You’re absolutely right regarding the markets taking a hit this week, I think the TSX saw a total loss of +2.2%. Maybe there is a correction in the works.

      October 3rd, 2009 at 7:09 pm
    2. Martin said:

      Hi,
      how do you protect your investment against falling value? For example let’s assume you hold Citigroup and you were buying it at the time when it was around $60 per share, were you holding it all the way down to $4 per share? I suppose you weren’t but I am trying to figure out what is your exit strategy.
      I use trailing stop loss and make decisions based on fundamentals vs. technical analysis (I am trying to be trading), but how it works when you perform long term value investing? I invest long term into funds so far, not in individual stocks. With individual stocks I am a bit scared to buy and hold it forever. Can you share your experience on this?
      Thanks

      October 6th, 2009 at 10:23 am

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