Supercharge Your Income With These Stocks

Recs

7

It's no secret that dividend-paying stocks are an essential part of any retirement portfolio. According to the Investment Company Institute, for example, more than half of investors over the age of 65 invest primarily for income. IRS data reveals that 59% of 2004 tax returns with qualified dividends came from investors aged 50 and up.

But all too often, investors believe that dividend-paying stocks are best-suited for people already in retirement. The same IRS data showed that only 15% of returns with qualified dividends came from investors under the age of 35 -- and that's a shame.

Dividend-paying stocks really show their merit with two things: time and reinvestment. And that means that only investors with lengthy time horizons can really take advantage of them to supercharge their retirements.

Talk about some extra scratch!
Consider a modest $1,000 investment in Johnson & Johnson back in July 1980. A year later, the investment would have been up 35% and paid another $50 in dividends. Holding on for the long run, however, would have returned quite a bit more:

Original Number of Shares

Shares Today

Value Today

Total Return

Annual Dividends Today

13

602

$34,530

3,353%

$1,108

But with dividends reinvested -- which only those investors who have other sources of income, like a salary, can do -- the returns are substantially better even than that:

Original Number of Shares

Shares Today

Value Today

Total Return

Annual Dividends Today

13

1,085

$62,214

6,121%

$1,996

Source: Johnson & Johnson Investor Relations, as of Dec. 4, 2008.

You didn't have to be a market genius to buy J&J in 1980. It was already a well-known blue chip with a proven track record of paying -- and increasing -- dividends.

Time and dividend reinvestment provided 483 additional shares, an extra $888 in dividend payments in 2008 alone, and a nearly doubled total return -- and a stronger retirement portfolio.

Finding the next dividend payer
To make the same kind of investment today, you need to find strong, stable companies with a history of regular and increasing dividend payments. One place to look is the Mergent Dividend Achievers Select index, which includes only stocks that have increased their dividend payments for the last 10 or more consecutive years.

Here are a few of the stocks it includes:

Company

Current Yield

Emerson Electric (NYSE: EMR)

4.1%

Target (NYSE: TGT)

2%

Colgate-Palmolive (NYSE: CL)

2.6%

Eli Lilly (NYSE: LLY)

5.7%

Stryker (NYSE: SYK)

0.9%

Chubb (NYSE: CB)

2.8%

Sysco (NYSE: SYY)

4%

Source: Yahoo! Finance.

While these aren't formal recommendations, their solid track record of raising dividends is reason enough for further research.

Ask not for whom the bell tolls
I'm not saying that younger investors shouldn't also hold riskier investments like small-cap and high-growth stocks, but to paraphrase Benjamin Franklin, an ounce of planning is worth a pound of retirement prosperity. And that means dividend stocks.

Building a portfolio of dividend-paying stocks early on is just one tenet of a successful retirement plan. For additional tips, consider a free 30-day trial to Motley Fool Rule Your Retirement where advisor Robert Brokamp helps investors approaching, nearing, or already in retirement develop plans to properly manage wealth.

A free trial includes model portfolios, the nitty-gritty on important asset classes, retirement calculators, and recommended investments -- and you can click here to get started. There's no obligation to subscribe.

This article was originally published on Sept. 2, 2008. It has been updated.

Todd Wenning hopes everyone had a wonderful Thanksgiving. Todd does not own shares of any companies mentioned. Johnson & Johnson, Sysco, and Eli Lilly are Income Investor recommendations. The Fool owns shares of Stryker. 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 09, 2008, at 10:56 AM, SteveTheInvestor wrote:

    Target? Colgate? Even worse... Stryker?? They may or may not be good investments, but they aren't worthy of consideration for an income portfolio. Stocks involve risk and to be compensated for the risk, I won't view a sub 3% dividend as relevant. With a dividend below this level, a stock should be evaluated for its growth potential (or in the case of Colgate, a place to hide from the market), not as an income stock.

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