I don't know about you, but lately I’ve been getting the urge to sell. My portfolio has become smaller and redder by the day -- and there's no end in sight. Watching the losses stack up is becoming unbearable.
Which got me to thinking …
W.W.B.D.?
What would Buffett do?
As hard as I try, I can't convince myself that he would sell and cut his losses. Every indication says he would patiently wait things out and probably add to his positions as well. And he is.
His ability to invest without falling prey to the fear of uncertainty is what has made him the greatest investor of all time.
But that's Buffett, not me. And even though I know what I ought to do, I'm still plagued by anxiety -- and I'm nowhere near as patient as he is. What can investors like me do when panic sets in?
Get paid to wait!
Those who, like me, are made impatient and anxious by this bear market should consider investing in dividend-paying stocks -- which offer the closest thing the market has to a guaranteed gain.
As I pointed out at the beginning of the year, as stock prices drop, dividend yields rise -- which means that some of the world's top companies now have mouth-watering yields. And those yields can provide a nice return on your investment, even when the market itself is redlining.
But it's important not to focus on a dividend yield alone, as recent happenings in the stocks below make clear:
Company |
Problem With Dividend |
---|---|
General Motors |
Dividend recently suspended as car-buying trends downward. |
Whole Foods |
Dividend recently suspended as pinched consumers cease paying up for groceries. |
Six Flags |
Dividend on preferred shares halted as the company struggles with debt. |
Even in a bear market, growing companies that pay dividends can be too good to be true -- so do your research.
Due dividend diligence
It's important to buy dividend-paying companies that have strong fundamentals and the ability to increase their dividends over time. Although dividend stocks will get you through this bear market, they should also have the qualities necessary to become a core holding of your portfolio.
James Early and Andy Cross, co-advisors of Motley Fool Income Investor, like to find dividend-paying companies that have:
- A dividend fully funded though free cash flow
- Improving operations
- A manageable debt load (less than 60% of capital)
The following companies fit those criteria, and all of them are large caps with yields of 5% or greater and dividend payments that have increased over the past year:
Company |
Market Cap |
Dividend Yield |
TTM Dividend Yield Growth |
---|---|---|---|
BP |
$176 billion |
5.8% |
25.6% |
Vodafone |
$134 billion |
5.3% |
11.1% |
ING Groep |
$64 billion |
6.9% |
68.2% |
US Bancorp |
$56 billion |
5.3% |
9.5% |
Data from Capital IQ as of Sept. 2, 2008; TTM = trailing 12 months.
If you'd like to see what dividend-paying companies we're recommending now, you can take a 30-day free trial of Income Investor. James and Andy provide two new high-yielding stocks every month, and -- thanks to current market conditions -- they have quite a list of companies to choose from. You can click here to get started -- there's no obligation to subscribe.
Fool analyst Adam J. Wiederman owns no shares of the companies mentioned above. Whole Foods is a Stock Advisor recommendation. US Bancorp is an Income Investor recommendation. The Fool has a strict disclosure policy.