Brett owens contrarian income report reviews

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Brett owens contrarian income report reviews

When it comes right down to it, we dividend investors really only need three things: Bargain stocks with ... High current yields and ideally ... Monthly payouts--so we can line up our income with our bills and reinvest our dividend cash without having to wait for three long months. I know--this list is cute, but it sounds [...] Continue Reading Let's chat about making some real money in stocks. I'm talking about 14.6% returns per year, every single year. I know, my 14.6% annual number sounds pedestrian in a world where peddlers are hawking virtual (pretend?) coins with pups on the cover. But my returns are real--and spectacular for investors who are patient. With this method we can double [...] Continue Reading Another hand went up. I pointed for the next question. When you consider dividend investments, Brett, what is more important in your opinion: The current yield and value of the stock itself, or The "engine" that is driving the business and the profits? "Great question," I replied. "The business engine. Always consider where the cash flow is coming from, [...] Continue Reading As Wall Street loses its mind over a long bond that pays a lousy 1%, we level-headed income investors are going to stay calm. And 7.7% on. Yes, we "prefer" (hint, hint) dividends that are 7X the weak 1% yield the wonks are clamoring about. I'll get to the specifics on these retirement makers--which we can [...] Continue Reading The mainstream crowd has gotten way too greedy--which means we could be in the teeth of a stock-market selloff within weeks. Most folks hear the word "selloff" and gasp. But not us contrarian dividend hounds! We know that volatility is our friend. It's easy to see this just by looking at what the market's done in the [...] Continue Reading Wall Street can have its casino. We're going to look past the suits' "common shares" and instead dial in some steady dividends--up to 10%!--that, for whatever reason, aren't widely talked about on financial news channels and websites. We income investors could care less what the S&P 500 or, heaven forbid, glue-sniffing NASDAQ, did in their daily session. [...] Continue Reading We can't take every dividend we see at face value. Especially when we're talking about 8%, 9% and even 10% yields. Bull markets, government stimulus, money printing and the scent of all-time highs might give the impression that any stock is safe. Unfortunately that isn't the case. Even in a bull market, there are dividend traps paying 8% to [...] Continue Reading Are you trying to grind out a livable retirement on dividends alone? It's possible, and it doesn't require millions and millions already in the bank. (Even today, with interest rates in the tank.) However, we must step outside the mainstream to achieve this. After all, why mess around with a standard $15,600 a year in retirement income [...] Continue Reading The economy is a mess--and that's presenting quite the opportunity for these landlords, and contrarians like us. Tenants are still paying, but these stocks are priced like a few are flaking. That's not the case. Plus, one firm is about to take advantage of a weak 2020 market to go shopping and secure future cash [...] Continue Reading "Brett, how you hanging in there?" My CPA leaned into his computer on our latest Zoom call. "Well, every time Gavin Newsom talks, my life seems to get a bit worse." (The governor of California had just announced that public and private schools would not open in the fall.) He cracked up. "That comment reminds [...] Continue Reading Successful dividend investing is simple, though not necessarily easy. There are nuances that trip up many investors (including most professionals!) These twists and turns create "yield alpha" opportunities for contrarian-minded income investors like us. Ready to retire on dividends? Follow these seven steps and we'll do it together. If everyone else in the market were perfectly grounded and calculated, there would be no chance for us to make above-average returns. After all, the 11.3% and 17.5% annualized returns that my Contrarian Income Report and Hidden Yields readers are earning would be snapped up in a perfectly efficient market. Thanks to these inefficiencies, we are able to bank big yields and price returns in Dividend Land. Ready to retire on dividends? Follow these seven steps and we'll do it together. Let's start with an obvious yet underappreciated rule for income investors. Step 1: Count Your Dividends Since we focus on high yield, most of our returns come from the "yield" component of stocks. So let's not forget about them when figuring out our returns! For example, we added this preferred stock fund to our portfolio in October 2015 and its price-only returns look quite pedestrian: We've gained 51%, while the price is up only 13%. The majority of our fat 51% gains have been delivered via cash dividends. So let's make sure we add in the orange (top) line below to reflect the big driver of our profits! ... Remember to Add Those Dividends! Step 2: Find Price Upside, Too While we could build a portfolio that's 100% invested in these types of safe bonds and do just fine, we're better off putting 50% or so of our cash in stocks. The upside is too good to ignore. Dividend growth is, over the long haul, the main driver of higher stock prices. We added this stock in November 2015 and received three dividend raises over the ensuing three-and-a-half years. The result? We enjoyed 105% total returns and really crushed the broader S&P 500: Why We Buy Dividend Stocks, Too Step 3: Monitor Dividend Coverage A dividend hike is the ultimate sign of dividend safety, so I prefer stocks that consistently raise their payouts. The likelihood that a company is going to raise its dividend (or cut it) is directly related to its payout ratio, or the percentage of its profits (or cash flows) that it is dishing out to shareholders as dividends. As a rule of thumb, a payout ratio below 50% is a sign of dividend safety. Some capital efficient firms can pay more and real estate investment trusts (REITs) can pay up to 90% of their cash flows as dividends. It depends on the company (and if you don't feel like following the payouts and cash flows of 20 stocks and funds yourself, I'll gladly do it for you as part of your subscription!) Dividend cuts are no fun. Not only are they a monthly pay cut for us, but (worse) they destroy capital. Take the case of CenturyLink (CTL), which has been writing its investors dividend checks that it couldn't cash since I called out this "paper telecom tiger" in May 2016 (and many times since!) At the time, CTL was paying out 135% of its earnings as dividends. The company wasn't growing profits, either, so the payout eventually had to go. Mr. Market eventually sniffed this out and CTL's management team finally made the inevitable cut earlier this year: Stocks Rise and Fall with Their Dividends Remember the rising dividend that drove our gains in Step No. 2? The opposite happened to unfortunate CTL investors here, as their stock's price dropped 59% while they received a 54% pay cut! Step 4: Don't Fight the Fed "Don't Fight the Fed" was Chapter 4 in investing wizard Martin Zweig's legendary book Winning on Wall Street. Here's why we'll make it Step 4 here. Zweig devoted 40 thoughtful pages to teach readers why they should "go with the flow" with respect to the Fed's trend at any given moment. Is the Fed raising rates? Then we should favor floating-rate bonds because their coupons (and values) tend to tick higher as rates climb. Has the cycle topped? When the Fed is prioritizing "easy money," we should trade in our floaters for fixed-rate bonds, which gain in value as rates fall. Step 5: Favor Out-of-Favor What did our winners in Steps 1 and 2 have in common? Two things: They were well run, and (most importantly) We bought them when each was out of favor. Contrarian investing should be uncomfortable. We want to buy stocks when their yields are high with respect to their norms. To put it plainly, we want to buy this stock when our "dividend per dollar" (as reflected by the orange line) is high. It means the price is low! High Historical Yield Meant Low Price And likewise, we want to purchase closed-end funds (CEFs) when they are trading at discounts to the value of the assets on their books. This is a unique feature of CEFs because they trade like stocks, with fixed pools of shares. They can and will trade at premiums and discounts to their portfolios, which means we can sit back and wait for bargains. Step 6: Get (and Stay) Fully Invested The stock market goes up about two-thirds of the time. Permabears miss out on compounding and it's not as easy to be a part-time bear as it sounds. To illustrate this, let's consider a study by Hulbert Financial. The firm looked at the best "peak market timers"-- the gurus who correctly forecasted the bursting of the Internet bubble in March 2000 and the Great Recession in October 2007. These were the clairvoyant advisers who had their clients out of stocks and mostly in cash when the S&P 500 was about to be chopped in half. Surely their clients did great over the long haul, given their capital was largely intact at the market bottoms, right? Wrong. None of these advisers turned in top performances. The reason? While they were good at timing tops, they were terrible at timing bottoms! The bearish advisers didn't get their clients back into stocks anywhere near the bottom. They had their capital intact, but they didn't deploy it -- and they largely missed out on the epic bull markets that followed these crashes. Think about the advisers and investors who sold in late December when the "bear market" became official. They moved to cash at the worst possible moment and have been on the sidelines waiting for a low risk "retest" of the lows. Mr. Market loves to confuse the most amount of people, and he really outdid himself this time! Barely a Bear Market... ... And Right Back to a Bull! We can be smart about staying in the market by focusing on "pullback-proof" names. Step 7: Prepare for Pullbacks Where's the market going from here? Well, if you own pullback-proof dividend payers, you probably don't care. My readers are often asking for safe income ideas. For stocks that pay dividends and never drop in price. It's a very difficult task, but not quite impossible. For most long-term investors who want big dividends -- I'm talking 6%, 7% and even 8%+ current yields -- I recommend holding safe dividend-paying bonds and funds through any market turbulence. Big dividends are the rubber duckies of the investing world. Wall Street hysteria may push their prices underwater for days or weeks at a time, but as the months and years pass, these stocks bounce back to the surface. Let's revisit our dividend machine from Steps 2 and 5. Did its investors even realize we had a market collapse in the fourth quarter of 2018? No. Q4 2018's Dividend Rubber Duckie There's nothing quite like a pullback-proof dividend machine! And if it's "2008-proof," then even better. After all, we're 11 years older now and few of us can afford a 50% drawdown. If you need big income without the drawdowns, I do love the short- and long-term prospects for five 2008-proof dividend payers yielding an average of 7.5%. If you're worried about a repeat of 2008 (and again let's be honest, who isn't?), here are five solid payouts you can purchase today without worrying about an overdue pullback (or worse, an all-out crash). Introducing the `2008-Proof' Income Portfolio Paying 7.5% The "cash or bear market" no-win quandary inspired me to put together my five-stock "2008-Proof" portfolio, which I'm going to GIVE you today. These 5 income wonders deliver 2 things most "blue-chip pretenders" don't, such as: Rock-solid (and growing) 7.5% average cash dividends (more than my portfolio's average). A share price that doesn't crumble beneath your feet while you're collecting these massive payouts. In fact, you can bank on 7% to 15% yearly price upside from these five "steady Eddie" picks. With the Dow regularly lurching a stomach-churning 1,000 points (or more) in a single day during pullbacks, I'm sure a safe -- and growing -- 7.5% every single year would have a lot of appeal. And remember, 7.5% is just the average! One of these titans pays a SAFE 8.5%. Think about that for a second: buy this incredible stock now and every single year, nearly 9% of your original buy boomerangs straight back to you in CASH. If that's not the very definition of safety, I don't know what is. These five stout stocks have sailed through meltdown after meltdown with their share prices intact, doling out huge cash dividends the entire time. Owners of these amazing "2008-proof" plays might have wondered what all the fuss was about! These five "2008-proof" wonders give you the best of both worlds: a 7.5% CASH dividend that jumps year in and year out (every year), with your feet firmly planted on a share price that holds steady in a market inferno and floats higher when stocks go Zen. Click here and I'll share the names of these five ultimate income investments, including their tickers and ideal buy prices along with my full analysis and research. This article was originally published by Contrarian Outlook. You can learn more about Brett Owens and Contrarian Income Report right here. Aug 04, 2021 | Money & Markets -- Let's shrug off today's "dividend desert" and do something most folks think is impossible -- ridiculous, even. We're going to replace our monthly salary with a huge income stream from a group of closed-end funds (CEFs) that yield 7% or more (sometimes a lot more!). The math here is simple: At a 7% dividend, you'll have just shy of $3,000 ($2,917, to be precise) flowing into your account every month on a $500,000 investment. Jul 28, 2021 | Money & Markets -- Hands up if you've heard of the Strategy Shares Nasdaq 7Handl Index ETF (Nasdaq: HNDL). Right. I thought not. And I can't blame you for overlooking this one. It's a relatively obscure ETF, with a bit over $700 million invested across a number of assets (just what those assets are I'll get to in a minute). Nonetheless, HNDL is worth discussing today because it highlights a couple things we need to look out for when picking high-yield funds for our portfolios. Jul 21, 2021 | Money & Markets -- Preferred stocks are the little-known answer to the dividend question:How do I juice meaningful 5% to 6% yields from my favorite blue-chip stocks? "Common" blue chips stocks usually don't pay 5% to 6%. Heck, the S&P 500's current yield, at just 1.3%, is its lowest in decades. But we can consider the exact same 505 companies in the popular index -- names like JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM), Broadcom (Nasdaq: AVGO) and NextEra Energy (NYSE: NEE)-- and find yields from 4.2% to 6.9%. Jul 07, 2021 | Money & Markets -- Unlike the broader market, REITs (real estate investment trusts) haven't been messing around this year. The Vanguard Real Estate ETF (NYSE: VNQ) has convincingly broken out to new highs. For us dividend stock traders, the choice between the confident VNQ and tip-toeing S&P 500 has been an easy one. Jun 30, 2021 | Money & Markets -- When it comes right down to it, we dividend investors really only need three things:Bargain stocks with ...High current yields and ideally ...Monthly payouts -- so we can line up our income with our bills and reinvest our dividend cash without having to wait for three long months. I know -- this list is cute, but it sounds wildly out of step with the times. After all, the COVID-19 rally has sliced the typical S&P 500 stock's yield to an unlivable 1.4%. And bargain valuations? Jun 24, 2021 | Money & Markets -- Far too many investors think inflation is bad news for closed-end funds (CEFs), for a simple reason: They fear it'll boost CEFs' borrowing costs. (Because CEFs, of course, use leverage to varying degrees.)That sounds like a reason to worry. Inflation, after all, boosts interest rates, and higher rates obviously mean CEFs would have to pay more to service their loans. Bad news, right? Jun 16, 2021 | Money & Markets -- Let's say you want to generate a middle-class wage using only dividends, but you've only got $300,000 to invest. Can it be done? It certainly can -- and it's easy to do with just three funds you can buy right now. Drop $300K into these three income generators and you'll get an outsized 9.8% dividend stream. That translates into a steady $2,450 every single month. Jun 11, 2021 | Money & Markets -- Business development companies (BDCs) are big dividend paying companies that tend to thrive as rates rise. Today, we'll discuss three inflation-powered payouts up to 10.7%. BDCs extend loans to small businesses and often their loans have a "floating rate" component included. So, the BDC tends to make more money as long-term rates rise. A quick background on BDCs. Since traditional banks have backed off on lending over the years, BDCs have stepped in. Aug 08, 2018 | Investor Place -- Once again, almost everyone has gotten sucked in by a tired investor slogan that's dead wrong--and it's costing them big gains (and income). But that's good news for contrarians like us, because we can bank some easy profits thanks to this all-too-predictable reflex. That's especially true now that the Federal Reserve has sent out a blaringly obvious signal that it's stuck to its rate-hike track, calling the economy "strong" after its latest meeting last week. But let's not get ahead of ourselves. Jul 16, 2018 | Investor Place -- Is it possible to double your money ? quickly ? buying safe dividend stocks? You bet. Let me explain how..."Basic" income investors are enamored with higher current yields. These are OK for payouts today, but they're not going to get us 100%+ gains. For triple-digit profits we must pay attention to the underrated dividend hike. These raises not only increase the yield on your initial investment, but they trigger stock price increases, too. Jul 13, 2018 | Investor Place -- Bigger isn't always better when it comes to dividends. Deutsche Bank recently pointed out "the first half of 2018 has seen the sharpest underperformance of dividend stocks since the financial crisis", as measured by the Dividend Aristocrats. Most readers are already familiar with this group of 53 names within the S&P 500 index, many paying out billions of dividends each quarter, with the most common trait being they've each boosted payouts a minimum of 25 consecutive years. Jul 13, 2018 | Yahoo Finance -- Bigger isn't always better when it comes to dividends. Deutsche Bank recently pointed out "the first half of 2018 has seen the sharpest underperformance of dividend stocks since the financial crisis", as measured by the Dividend Aristocrats. Most readers are already familiar with this group of 53 names within the S&P 500 index, many paying out billions of dividends each quarter, with the most common trait being they've each boosted payouts a minimum of 25 consecutive years. Jul 10, 2018 | Investor Place -- My best advice for you today is this: ignore the breathless trade-war panicking and focus on one thing: cash. Because the truth is, US companies--like the 3 stout dividend growers we'll dive into below--are swimming in it. So much so, in fact, that they don't know what to do with it all ... so they're sending it right back out the door to us!But don't take my word for it; ask the folks at UBS, who just said that US companies are sitting on nearly $2.5 trillion in cash. Jul 06, 2018 | Investor Place -- Each June, the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts (NAREIT) hosts a conference that brings all of the key players in the sector together. For REIT investors, it's the equivalent of the Super Bowl and it offers a window into who's poised to perform well in the second half of the year and beyond. This year, the focus in real estate remains about mergers and acquisitions, as small- and mid-range companies are combining to better compete with the larger players. Jun 25, 2018 | Investor Place -- Do you own the next GE? I'm talking about five dividends that are not as sacred as their shareholders mistakenly believe. We'll review them in a minute. First, the warning signs. Many investors were kicked in the gut by General Electric (NYSE: ) last year, no thanks to pundits who ignored numerous red flags and encouraged people to buy GE and its historically generous yield. Sure, 5% isn't "high," but in a sleepy industrial like General Electric, that's certainly attractive at a glance. Jun 25, 2018 | Yahoo Finance -- Do you own the next GE? I'm talking about five dividends that are not as sacred as their shareholders mistakenly believe. We'll review them in a minute. First, the warning signs. Many investors were kicked in the gut by General Electric (NYSE:GE) last year, no thanks to pundits who ignored numerous red flags and encouraged people to buy GE and its historically generous yield. Sure, 5% isn't "high," but in a sleepy industrial like General Electric, that's certainly attractive at a glance. Jun 14, 2018 | MSN -- When investors look for dividends, they usually think about blue-chip names that are just as common on Main Street as they are on Wall Street. However, there are a large number of single-digit stocks flying under the market's radar that also offer attractive yields. Individual investors tend to gravitate toward stocks trading under $10 for multiple reasons. For one, it can psychologically feel more powerful to buy 100 shares of a company trading for $7 than just seven shares of a $100 name. Jun 14, 2018 | Investor Place -- When investors look for dividends, they usually think about blue-chip names that are just as common on Main Street as they are on Wall Street. However, there are a large number of single-digit stocks flying under the market's radar that also offer attractive yields. Individual investors tend to gravitate toward stocks trading under $10 for multiple reasons. For one, it can psychologically feel more powerful to buy 100 shares of a company trading for $7 than just seven shares of a $100 name. May 29, 2018 | Investor Place -- The yield on the benchmark, 10-year U.S. Treasury note has moved above 3% in May, which is the highest it's been since 2011. This is notable to REIT investors for multiple reasons. First, higher interest rates (both short-term and long-term) mean that bank CD's and other lower-risk income investments are offering higher competitive yields. Of equal note, is the fact that rising long-term interest rates are now factoring into higher discount rates for fundamental valuation models. May 14, 2018 | Investor Place -- My college buddy AC wrote to me after the bitcoin bubble crashed: "You were very right! All the cryptos have CRASHED. Good call!"I didn't address the crypto situation much as it unfolded because I didn't want readers mistakenly buying into the bubble. Now that the air has come out of the crypto-mania, I hope it's safe to talk about the real opportunity. I'm not talking about Bitcoin. Apr 20, 2018 | Yahoo Finance -- While most income investors are reaching for big yields right now, a small group of "hidden yield" stocks are quietly handing smart investors growing income streams plus annual returns of 12%, 27.1% and even 54% or more per year. So if you want to double your money every few years ? and double your income as well ? then you need to focus on the seven stocks I'm about to share. There are three ? and only three ? ways a company's stock can pay us:A cash dividend. A dividend hike. Apr 20, 2018 | Yahoo Finance -- "First-level" investors ? those who buy and sell on headlines ? mistakenly believe that real estate investment trust (REIT) profits will suffer if rates continue to rise. They're wrong. This is actually an ideal time to buy the strongest names in the sector. Note that I said strongest. The sector's popular proxy is something you should avoid, despite its popularity. I'll call it out in a moment. Overall, rising rates are actually good for the best REITs because it signals a rolling economy. Apr 20, 2018 | Investor Place -- While most income investors are reaching for big yields right now, a small group of "hidden yield" stocks are quietly handing smart investors growing income streams plus annual returns of 12%, 27.1% and even 54% or more per year. So if you want to double your money every few years ? and double your income as well ? then you need to focus on the seven stocks I'm about to share. Apr 20, 2018 | Investor Place -- "First-level" investors ? those who buy and sell on headlines ? mistakenly believe that real estate investment trust (REIT) profits will suffer if rates continue to rise. They're wrong. This is actually an ideal time to buy the strongest names in the sector. Note that I said strongest. The sector's popular proxy is something you should avoid, despite its popularity. I'll call it out in a moment. Overall, rising rates are actually good for the best REITs because it signals a rolling economy.

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