![]() |
Josh Peters shows you how to put his three dividend plays of income, insight, and independence into action to build a steady income stream. These are the tactics he uses to build and manage his DividendInvestor Builder and Harvest portfolios with total return goals of 9%-13%.
He takes you inside a corporation and delineates the factors that allow it to pay and raise dividends. You’ll discover how to separate safe dividends from risky ones. And you’ll see how to construct a portfolio of dividend-paying stocks that meet your financial needs. It’s a must-read reference for those saving for retirement and those already retired who wish for a more reliable income source.
See for yourself. Click on the thumbnails below for a sneak peek of the Ultimate Dividend Playbook.
Chapter 1: Income? From Stocks?
How high-yield stocks deliver the steady income of fixed-income securities and the growth of stocks.
Chapter 2: Dividends, Values, and Returns
Why and how current dividend yield plus future dividend growth potential drives total return.
Chapter 3: Corporations: Dividend Machines
What it takes for a company to turn capital into current dividends and future dividend growth.
Chapter 4: Dividend Insight
What dividends tell you about a company and its ability to continue paying you dividends.
Chapter 5: Dividends Past, Present, and Projected
Where dividends have been and what kinds of dividends and dividend growth to expect in the future.
Chapter 6: Is It Safe?
How to tell the safe dividends from the risky ones.
Chapter 7: Will It Grow?
Tools for determining if a company’s dividend will grow and by how much.
Chapter 8: What’s the Return?
How to determine what your margin of safety should be based on the yields of stocks.
Chapter 9: Independence
Why dividend investing insulates you from Wall Street’s short-term mentality.
Chapter 10: Managing a Dividend Portfolio
Change your thinking from market value to income generation for success.
Chapter 11: The Future of Dividends
Why, whatever the future of taxation and corporate self-interest, dividend investing will continue to be desirable.
Plus — appendixes on all these income-related topics