Friday, April 15, 2011

This High-Yield Stock Gained 751% in 2 Years

Income investing has an unfair stigma attached to it.
The conventional wisdom says invest in dividend payers -- also known as "widow and orphan" stocks -- if you're just trying to stash your money somewhere. If you actually want to earn a decent return, then look somewhere else.
Dividend payers are thought to be stodgy. They're slow movers. They're boring. They'll pay you a few percent a year but won't move anywhere.
That common wisdom couldn't be further from the truth.
Take a look at this chart:

 
Yes, that's an income investment. In fact, I hold Magellan Midstream (NYSE: MMPin one of my High-Yield Investing portfolios. It pays 5% a year. Not too long ago it was paying 7% before the price rose dramatically. It has returned 128% since April 2009.
But this isn't some outlier. You can find dozens of income stocks that have experienced the same trend. A quick screen on Bloomberg shows 193 stocks and funds yielding above 5% that also beat the 71% gain of the S&P 500 during the past two years.
Here's one of those 193. It's been paying 6.4% in addition to 751% in capital gains for the past two years (the chart below shows the impact of dividends too, which increase the return). The stock was beaten up in the bear market but rebounded nicely:

 
Action to Take --> Now, I'm not recommending either Magellan Midstream or Crosstex Energy (Nasdaq: XTEX-- but they help prove a point. No, not every dividend-payer is automatically going to beat the market. Some might not even show a positive return.
But the school of thought that says dividend stocks are only a place to park money -- and not actually see it beat the market -- is simply incorrect.

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