Is it advisable to do this?

Quote from Ghost of Cutten:

Please tell me you're joking! Historically, dividends make up half of total stock market return.

If a $50 stock pays a $1 dividend, it is generally earning at least $1 per annum. So without the dividend, the stock would rise to $51+X (where X is the capital gain or loss depending on market and corporate performance) within 12 months due to accretion of corporate earnings. With the dividend, the stock pays out $1 and goes to $50+X within 12 months.

In both cases the stock becomes more valuable over time (other things being equal) due to accumulated earnings, whether they are retained by the company and used productively, or paid out to investors as a dividend.
that is the hoped for outcome but it seldom works out. look at the bank stocks. they were the dividend kings of past years. if you carefully read what you wrote you will see that you made my case. dividends are a wash.
 
Even with the biggest and most stable companies .... you could lose half your money and be waiting for the market to recover. Like happened in 2008. But I'm sure you realize this :D
 
No risk no reward.

High risk high reward

Find somewhere in between where you are comfortable and model your risk well .

Diversification is the closest thing to a free lunch. Also, keep in mind, EVERYTHING went down together in 08 so those diversified well still took it in the chin if they panicked and sold at the bottom. Understand your time horizons.
 
Quote from Zr1Trader:

No risk no reward.

High risk high reward


the first one is true. the second one is not true. high risk most often means no reward too. hitting singles is the best way to make a reward. not shooting for home runs.
 
Quote from osho67:

I have usd 500000 and interest I receive from my savings a/cs is not much. If I open a portfolio margin a/c with IB , IB will also lend me at 1.3%. I buy good shares with good dividend yield and hold it for long term . My return at least will be better than savings a/cs .

No. The market may go down in which case your account could lose money, something not very likely with a savings account. Margin can magnify losses as well as gains, plus you have the added cost of the margin.

Personally I don't think dividend yield is very predictive of future total returns, and that's all I care about, but I read an interesting approach to retiring on dividend stocks. Essentially ignore the value of your portfolio and focus on the income stream that it produces. In down years the value may go down but dividend yields will likely rise providing protection to your income stream. In good years the portfolio value goes up which will help to enhance your income stream. Note that the data in this article is based on backtested data, his future returns are likely to be less, as are yours.

http://www.osam.com/pdf/Commentary_May10.pdf

Here is a simple alternative approach, relying not on dividends but on buying and holding non-correlated (as much as possible) assets.
http://alhambrainvestments.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/the-benefits-of-low-correlation.pdf

Not a trading approach but it will beat a savings account most years.
 
Quote from Ghost of Cutten:

Terrible advice. Most licensed advisors are salesmen - sharks in suits, trying to rip you off with the highest commissions and kickbacks possible. Their collective performance is terrible, only a small minority are good at their jobs. Do not trust them.

Read this: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Little-Book...2101/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1305743815&sr=8-1

Then set up a diversified passive index-fund portfolio and sit on it.
Terrible advise.

More effective to buy an ETF.

You suggest to pay all those comissions instead?

As stated before -- this is not the place to seek actual investement advise.
 
OP,
the 1.3% rate IB charges is only relevant if you plan to borrow. I'm not sure why would do that. Most banks and MM funds are paying less than 1.3% on your cash so might as well pay cash for the stocks instead of borrowing

If you plan to have exposure higher than 100% I'd highly recommend you dont do that as a novice in the investing world
 
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