Wie in Sterlings thread geschrieben, meiner Meinung nach ist DGI zu 100%ig ohne SimplySafeDividends möglich.
Ich bin nun limitiert an Sachkenntnis und kenne meine Grenzen und leiste mir mit SimplySafeDividends einen professionellen Radar, der mit aufpasst, dass mir kein Dividendenschnitt ins Depot schneit. Free country ...
ETFs und DividendGrowthInvesting erscheint mir keine gute Idee zu sein. Neben dem Spass an der Sache eines individuellen Depots, den ich auch empfinde und dem enormen Lerneffekt, gibt es aber auch einen handfesten ökonomischen Grund, ETFs aus rein dividendentechnischer Sicht zu meiden: Die Auszahlung ist schwankend unzuverlässig und war in der Wirtschaftskrise ein Trauerspiel - nix für mich:
Second of all, how safe is that income? The Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF is invested in more than 400 companies – certainly not all of their dividend payments will be safe throughout a full economic cycle.
Unfortunately, we can see that the fund’s dividend payments were hit hard during the last recession. Total dividend payments reached $1.44 per share in 2008 before falling to $1.17 in 2009 and $1.09 in 2010, representing a peak-to-trough decline of about 25%. Annual dividend payments didn’t recover back to their 2008 peak until 2012.
Put another way, if the retired investor above owned 25,000 shares of VYM, he would have received $36,000 of dividend income in 2008.
By 2010, his annual dividend income had fallen to about $27,000 – a drop of more than $725 per month. Depending on his budgeting and margin of safety, life could suddenly have become much more stressful.
https://www.simplysafedividends.com/inte...ual-stocks
Ich bin nun limitiert an Sachkenntnis und kenne meine Grenzen und leiste mir mit SimplySafeDividends einen professionellen Radar, der mit aufpasst, dass mir kein Dividendenschnitt ins Depot schneit. Free country ...
ETFs und DividendGrowthInvesting erscheint mir keine gute Idee zu sein. Neben dem Spass an der Sache eines individuellen Depots, den ich auch empfinde und dem enormen Lerneffekt, gibt es aber auch einen handfesten ökonomischen Grund, ETFs aus rein dividendentechnischer Sicht zu meiden: Die Auszahlung ist schwankend unzuverlässig und war in der Wirtschaftskrise ein Trauerspiel - nix für mich:
Second of all, how safe is that income? The Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF is invested in more than 400 companies – certainly not all of their dividend payments will be safe throughout a full economic cycle.
Unfortunately, we can see that the fund’s dividend payments were hit hard during the last recession. Total dividend payments reached $1.44 per share in 2008 before falling to $1.17 in 2009 and $1.09 in 2010, representing a peak-to-trough decline of about 25%. Annual dividend payments didn’t recover back to their 2008 peak until 2012.
Put another way, if the retired investor above owned 25,000 shares of VYM, he would have received $36,000 of dividend income in 2008.
By 2010, his annual dividend income had fallen to about $27,000 – a drop of more than $725 per month. Depending on his budgeting and margin of safety, life could suddenly have become much more stressful.
https://www.simplysafedividends.com/inte...ual-stocks