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The World's Best Dividend Portfolio

In June, I invested my money equally in a selection of 10 high-yield dividend stocks. Those names offer triple the yield of the average S&P 500 stock. (You can read all the details.) Now let's check out the results so far.

Company

Cost Basis

Shares

Recent Price

Total Value

Return

Southern (NYSE: SO  ) $39.71 25.0818 $45.75 $1,147.49 15.2%
Exelon (NYSE: EXC  ) $41.82 23.818 $43.35 $1,032.51 3.7%
National Grid (NYSE: NGG  ) $48.90 20.3693 $47.82 $974.06 (2.2%)
Philip Morris International (NYSE: PM  ) $68.49 14.5429 $77.85 $1,132.16 13.7%
Annaly Capital (NYSE: NLY  ) $18.24 65.5 $16.89 $1,106.30 (5.7%)
Frontier Communications (NYSE: FTR  ) $7.88 126.4243 $5.10 $644.76 (35.3%)
Plum Creek Timber $38.42 26 $36.51 $949.26 (5%)
Brookfield Infrastructure Partners (NYSE: BIP  ) $26.12 38.2825 $26.58 $1,017.55 1.8%
Vodafone $26.52 37.5566 $27.36 $1,027.55 3.2%
Seaspan (NYSE: SSW  ) $14.61 69 $13.56 $935.64 (7.2%)
Cash       $51.27  
Dividends Receivable       $77.00  
Total Portfolio       $10,095.55 (0.6%)
Investment in SPY
(Including Dividends)
        (1.5%)
Relative Performance
(Percentage Points)
        0.9

Source: S&P Capital IQ.

Our total portfolio performance moved from -3% last week to -0.6% this week, and we're still outperforming the S&P, by 0.9 percentage points, but with much less volatility. I'm confident in the long-run nature of this portfolio, and I fully expect it to outperform. Even if our capital goes down in the interim, we'll still see dividends while we wait. We have five stocks outperforming the index.

As I mentioned last week, I added to my Annaly position at a cost of $16.24, for a yield of about 14.5%. With more than $50 in cash already on the balance sheet and more than $60 more on the way by Feb. 3, I could reinvest another slug of cash shortly. So, Fools, what should I buy? Thanks for your suggestions last week.

If you're looking for other dividend ideas, I wrote an article earlier this month on a great one called "The Dividend-Paying 2-Bagger."It has a meaty dividend and could be a double besides. You can read all the details, including why I decided to buy it for my own portfolio (though not the World's Best Portfolio yet).

If we should see a general market downturn, I'll be glad to be in dividend stocks, which should see lower downside volatility. We should still see good performance from names such as Annaly, which thrives in a low-rate environment. And there's already some hint from the Federal Reserve that low rates may extend into 2014, making Annaly a likely good hold through 2013.

Dividends and other announcements
Going into the holiday season, the news has been pretty light. We have an interesting development from Seaspan and Exelon and these bits of dividend news:

  • Last week, Seaspan announced a big repurchase authorization, up to 10 million shares, or 15% of shares outstanding, in a tender offer. The shocker was the 43% premium the company was willing to pay over Monday's closing price. Shareholders can tender their shares for $15 by Jan. 11. In addition, the company said it will spend $54 million in stock to buy its management company, helping to eliminate conflicts of interests. That tender probably means that another dividend raise is off the table for a few quarters yet.
  • Exelon received approval on Wednesday from the U.S. Justice Department for its acquisition of Constellation on the condition that it divest three Maryland electricity plants. The $7.9 billion deal should close early next year.

Dividend news:

  • Vodafone announced a special dividend of 4 pence on top of its 3.05 pence interim payout. The stock traded ex-div on Nov. 16 and the money will be paid out on Feb. 3. In dollars, the total payout comes to about $1.12 per U.S. share at current exchange rates.
  • Frontier went ex-div on Dec. 7 and pays out $0.1875 cents per share on Dec. 29.
  • Philip Morris went ex-div on Dec. 20 and pays out $0.77 a share on Jan. 10.
  • Annaly goes ex-dividend on Dec. 27 and pays out $0.57 per share on Jan. 26.

All that, of course, means more money coming into our pockets shortly and more money to reinvest.

It's fun to sit back and get paid, and with the market volatility, we might have a good chance to reinvest those dividends at good prices. Europe continues to be an absolute mess, and continued bad news will probably have stocks plunging again. If they do, I'll be inclined to pick more shares up.

Foolish bottom line
I've been a fan of big dividends for a while, and I think this portfolio will outperform the market over time through the power of dividends. As I promised in the original article, I'll be holding these stocks for at least a year and will continue to track the portfolio over the course of the year, including news on these companies.

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Jim Royal, Ph.D., owns shares of the 10 portfolio stocks mentioned in the table. The Motley Fool owns shares of Seaspan, Brookfield Infrastructure, Annaly, Plum Creek, and Philip Morris, as well as having created a covered strangle position on Plum Creek. Motley Fool newsletter services have recommended buying shares of Exelon, National Grid, Philip Morris, Vodafone, Southern, and Brookfield Infrastructure, as well as writing a covered straddle position in Seaspan and a covered strangle position in Exelon. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools don't all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.


Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On December 23, 2011, at 4:17 PM, Hawmps wrote:

    First (assuming you are limiting yourself to what you already own the portfolio) I'd look at what is down the most now, since the time of purchase. In this case it is FTR, and then I'd ask myself, "self, am I still as confident in my decision to purchase this asset today as I was when I bought it?" If the answer is yes, then buy FTR, because by answering yes, I believe it is cheaper today compared to the expected future performance when I bought it. If the answer is no, then cross it off the list and repeat the process and ask myself, "self....."

  • Report this Comment On December 26, 2011, at 12:12 PM, burnaka wrote:

    I agree with hawmps, to a degree.

    You have the most shares and lowest dollar amount invested in ftr, yet it has the highest yield, meaning the price dropped the most since initial investment. If you agree the dividend is safe, as the CEO has stated repeatedly, then I would take all dividends paid, and reinvest in ftr. Biggest yield bang for the dollar invested, and when the price recovers, highest appreciation potential, it also lowers the cost basis.

    If you feel the dividend is not safe, regardless of what FTR CEO has said, then sell it, reinvest the proceeds in the next highest yielding stock. You do not list the yields in the block, I am assuming the next highest is nly.

    I am long FTR.

  • Report this Comment On December 27, 2011, at 12:26 PM, bammerone wrote:

    I am long SO, NLY, NGG, PM, FTR so I obviously agree with your Portfolio approach. I would be wary of FTR at this point, it is beaten down, but I believe it is going to stay down for quite a while.

    On the other hand, NLY just went Ex-div, so the price is down $0.60 today. might want to load up and get a proven performer. Interest rates aren't going up any time soon, the div is solid and the stock is down even without the ex-div.

    Their model keeps pumping cash as long as rates remain low. Feds aren't going to let them rise anytime in the next year.

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Related Tickers

5/24/2012 4:01 PM
PM $85.34 Up +1.01 +1.20%
Philip Morris Inte… CAPS Rating: *****
SO $45.60 Up +0.23 +0.51%
Southern Company CAPS Rating: *****
SSW $16.45 Up +0.50 +3.13%
Seaspan Corp CAPS Rating: *****
NLY $16.60 Up +0.07 +0.42%
Annaly Capital Man… CAPS Rating: ****
BIP $31.40 Up +0.16 +0.51%
Brookfield Infrast… CAPS Rating: *****
EXC $36.86 Up +0.05 +0.14%
Exelon Corp CAPS Rating: *****
NGG $52.87 Up +0.05 +0.09%
National Grid plc… CAPS Rating: *****

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