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Build Real Wealth

By Chuck Saletta – Updated Nov 15, 2016 at 5:52PM

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Compound your investments to see your portfolio really grow.

Dividends are probably the most maligned and ignored part of the average person's investment strategy. After all, more often than not, a dividend payment represents just a few percent of an investor's stake in a business. Plus, given the wild gyrations in stock prices these days, the total value of a year's worth of dividends can be added to or taken away from a company's share price in less than a week.

It's a pity that dividends get so little respect. Those lowly payments, if used to their full potential, can help you build serious wealth. Here's how.

Get cash now
Assume you have a company that sports a 4% yield. For every $1 you invest, that means you get $0.04 in annual dividend payments. That may not seem like much, but it does mean that over the next 25 years, you'd get your entire investment back in cash -- while keeping the shares that produced it.

Add a sprinkle of growth
I certainly understand if a 25-year payback doesn't seem all that enticing. After all, that's a rather long time, and a lot can change in that period. Fortunately, dividends aren't always static payments. Many companies raise their dividends on a regular basis, as their operations grow and strengthen over time.

With that in mind, let's look at making a one-time $1,000 investment, in a company with a 4% current yield whose payout is expected to grow 4% per year.

Year

New Cash Received

Cumulative Cash Received

1

$40.00

$40.00

5

$46.79

$216.65

10

$56.93

$480.24

15

$69.27

$800.94

18

$77.92

$1,025.82

20

$84.27

$1,191.12

25

$102.53

$1,665.84



With that small annual boost, you will now get your entire investment paid back to you in 18 years -- a full seven years faster than before.

Light the afterburners
While things might be starting to look interesting by this point, it gets even better if you take that cash, but instead of holding onto it, you reinvest it. In other words, use that cash paid out to you to buy even more shares of a company with a decent and growing dividend.

Let's take the same scenario described above, only instead of holding the cash that the company generates, we use it to buy even more shares of its stock. Also, to keep things fair, we'll assume that the company's stock increases in line with its dividend hikes, about 4% a year.

Year

New Cash Received

Cumulative Cash Received

1

$40.00

$40.00

5

$54.42

$234.66

10

$79.96

$579.46

15

$117.49

$1,086.08

20

$172.63

$1,830.48

25

$253.65

$2,924.24



Thanks to reinvesting, the equivalent of your entire $1,000 investment would have been paid to you by the end of 15 years. Most astonishingly of all, after 25 years, you would have received payments totaling nearly triple your originally invested $1,000. That's not bad for a meager 4% dividend payment, eh?

This tremendous potential for dividends to improve your overall returns is precisely why my Foolish colleague, Mathew Emmert, offers his Motley Fool Income Investor service. His goal is to help you put the power of compounded dividends to work in your portfolio -- helping you achieve your financial goals.

Get real
The absolute best part of all this figuring is that all these calculations amount to much more than a mere academic exercise. There are hundreds of very real companies out there with a long-term history of paying solid dividends and routinely raising those payments. This table contains just a small sampling of those businesses:

Company

Current
Yield

One-year
dividend change

10-year annualized
dividend growth

UST (NYSE:UST)

4.3%

4.7%

4.9%

Developers Diversified Realty (NYSE:DDR)

4.4%

7.6%

7.1%

Pinnacle West Capital (NYSE:PNW)

4.4%

5.3%

7.2%

CBL & Associates Properties (NYSE:CBL)

4.5%

12.6%

8.1%

Bank of America (NYSE:BAC)

4.3%

11.1%

13.6%

Kinder Morgan Energy Partners (NYSE:KMP)

7.2%

6.6%

17.7%

Fifth Third Bancorp (NASDAQ:FITB)

4.1%

12.4%

17.8%



Get started now
Real wealth is built over time, through the slow and steady rewards of reinvestment. The sooner you get started, the better your odds are of accumulating a substantial nest egg of your own. Join us at Income Investor to begin your journey, today. Still not sure? A 30-day free trial is available here. You're under no obligation to subscribe, yet you'll be able to take the lessons you've learned with you, should you decide not to join.

At the time of publication, Fool contributor Chuck Saletta owned shares of Bank of America, Fifth Third Bank, and Kinder Morgan Management, which is related to Kinder Morgan Energy Partners. Bank of America is an Income Investor recommendation. The Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Stocks Mentioned

Bank of America Corporation Stock Quote
Bank of America Corporation
BAC
$31.03 (-2.21%) $0.70
CBL & Associates Properties, Inc Stock Quote
CBL & Associates Properties, Inc
CBL
Fifth Third Bancorp Stock Quote
Fifth Third Bancorp
FITB
$32.09 (-2.17%) $0.71
SITE Centers Corp. Stock Quote
SITE Centers Corp.
SITC
$10.86 (-3.89%) $0.44
Pinnacle West Capital Corporation Stock Quote
Pinnacle West Capital Corporation
PNW
$69.67 (-2.25%) $-1.60
ProShares Trust - ProShares Ultra 7-10 Year Treasury Stock Quote
ProShares Trust - ProShares Ultra 7-10 Year Treasury
UST
$46.80 (-3.12%) $-1.51

*Average returns of all recommendations since inception. Cost basis and return based on previous market day close.

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