investing financing guide  
 

Steadily Making Money - Income Investing
By Anthony Green
Not all investors want to take on the risk that comes with making a killing. Some people just want to invest in the stock market as a means of providing a steady income. They don’t need stock values to go through the ceiling. Instead, they need stocks that perform well consistently.

If your purpose for in stocks is to create income, you need to choose stocks that pay dividends. Dividends are typically paid quarterly to stockholders on record.

Distinguishing between dividends and interest

Don’t confuse dividends with interest. Most people are familiar with interest, because that’s how you grow your money over the years in the bank. The important difference is that interest is paid to creditors, and dividends are paid to owners (meaning shareholders and if you own stock, you’re a hareholder, because stocks represent shares in a publicly traded company). When you buy stock, you buy a piece of that company. When you put money in a bank (or when you buy bonds), you basically loan

your money. You become a creditor, and the bank or bond issuer is the debtor, and as such, it must eventually pay your money back to you with interest.

Recognizing the importance of an income stock’s yield. for income means that you have to consider your investment’s yield. If you want income from a stock investment, you must compare the yield from that particular stock with alternatives. Looking at the yield is a way to compare the income you expect to receive from one investment with the expected income from others.

To understand how to calculate yield, you need the following formula -

Yield = Payout ÷ Investment Amount

Yield enables you to compare how much income you would get for a prospective investment compared with the income you would get from other investments. For the sake of simplicity, this exercise is based on an annual percentage yield basis (compounding would increase the yield). Jones Co. and Smith Co. are both typical dividend-paying stocks, and presume that both companies are similar in most respects except for their differing dividends. How can you tell whether a $50 stock with a $2.50 annual dividend is better (or worse) than a $100 stock with a $4.00 dividend? The yield tells you. Even though Jones Co. pays a higher dividend ($4.00), Smith Co. has a higher yield (5 percent).

Therefore, if you had to choose between those two stocks as an income investor, you would choose Smith Co. Of course, if you truly want to maximize your income and don’t really need your investment to appreciate a lot, you should probably choose Brown Co.’s bond because it offers a yield of 6 percent. Dividend-paying stocks do have the ability to increase in value. They may not have the same growth potential as growth stocks, but, at the very least, they have a greater potential for capital gain than bank CDs or bonds. You may get more than you invest.

Article Source: http://www.articlemap.com

Tips to turn $1000 into $1,00,000, articles on stock market trading and investing. To get detail about the stock market and finance visit www.2stocktrading.com.





 
 
  Here are some articles to start with..  
 
 
Property Investment Tips
If you are looking for a long-term investment, real estate could be of interest. The real estate market has its ups and downs, but over the long term it keeps edging upwards. As with any other Read more...
Real Estate Investing Revealed
By Charrissa Cawley
Do you think there are great big secrets when it comes to real estate that nobody wants to tell you? Maybe you have thought that it would be great to be able to make some money with real estate, but Read more...
 
 
 
 
   

 

 

 

Copyright 2007 by Investing Matters, All Rights Reserved