by: Charles M. O'Melia
When you invest in the stock market for ever-increasing cash dividend income, verses trying to make a buck in the stock market, your mindset will change. There will no longer be a fear of losing money in the stock market.
With the right type of investment plan and investment choices all worries of losing money in the stock market will disappear.
The mind set that will emerge when you adopt a proven income producing investment plan in the stock market will create an air of worry-free concern about the up and down turmoil of a volatile stock market. Whether your investment portfolio is rising or falling won’t make a difference. Your income producing investment plan will prove to continually increase your cash dividend income from all your stock market investments, on a weekly, monthly and yearly basis.
The use of a proven investment plan will allay all fears about investing in the stock market. Why? Because the proven investment plan is based on two very simple and fundamental investment strategies – investing in only those companies that have a historical record of raising their dividend every year, and having the dividends from those companies rolled back into more shares each quarter, until retirement.
By investing in only those companies that raise their dividend every year you will become confident and assured of each stock market investment. And by having the dividends of each company rolled back into more shares each quarter you automatically dollar-cost average into the company’s stock throughout the years.
What happens when you invest with this mind set – investing for ever-increasing cash dividend income through companies that raise their dividend every year, rather than trying to make a buck in the stock market?
You begin investing in only those companies that have a proven record of rewarding their shareholders every year. Every dividend rolled back into the company’s stock every quarter increases the amount of shares owned, and therefore, every dividend from the company will be higher than the previous dividend.
After 10 or 15 years, you’ll find that the cash dividends begin to add up!
The cash dividend income will increase every quarter, no matter what the stock price of the company is at any given time in the market place. As a matter of fact, once you have owned the stock for 10 or 15 years, you’ll be torn as to whether you want the stock to go up or to go down, since a lower stock price will allow your dividend reinvestment to purchase more shares, thereby accelerating your cash dividend income.
The rising dividend every year will also help off-set the risk of inflation. This will be especially helpful when you retire and start having the dividends sent home,rather than having the dividends rolled over into more shares.
During the retirement years, when the dividend is being sent home to help ends-meet, the price of the stock doesn’t matter. Your income increases every year anyway, because every company owned has a program of raising their dividend every year.
After retirement, if your account is worth $250,000 one year and due to a severe drop in the stock market, the net value of your securities drops to $200,000, the net worth of the securities at $200,000 would still generate a higher cash dividend income. The net worth of your holdings means little, if the income produced from your holdings are increasing every year, no matter what the net worth.
That is the partial reasoning behind investing in only those companies that raise their dividend every year. The other reason is to eliminate risk in investing in the stock market. A company that has been raising their dividend every year MUST be doing something right or the money wouldn’t be there to pay their shareholders ever-increasing cash dividends.
The lower the stock price goes, after your initial investment, the higher the dividend yield of the stock. This is extremely powerful and beneficial for you when you are still having the dividends reinvested. Reinvesting those dividends at a lower stock price accelerates your cash dividend income.
And if you are in retirement and no longer investing in the stock, the lower stock price does not affect your dividend income at all. The cash dividend income will still increase every year due to the company’s program of raising their dividend every year.
As time goes on using this type of investment plan/approach you will discover that by reinvesting those ever-increasing cash dividends, coupled with stock appreciation is a very powerful wealth creating formula!
All you will need to know to start a commission-free proven investment strategy (with a plan and a goal) can be found in my book The Stockopoly Plan - Investing for Retirement.
For more excerpts from the book ‘The Stockopoly Plan’ visit: http://www.thestockopolyplan.com
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