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Strategies & Market Trends : Dividend investing for retirement

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E_K_S
To: Baton who wrote (25329)8/16/2016 12:15:15 PM
From: Steve Felix1 Recommendation   of 34328
 
If you want steady increases, I don't see TIS giving them out. LIKE BGS, they are shareholder friendly though,
in the dividend department. BGS went six quarters @ .34, but over the last five years, they doubled their dividend from .21 to .42.

In August 2011, TIS paid .10. Over the next nine quarters it went to .35. Been there ever since. I don't see
how not being steady is a bad thing. They put more money in shareholders pockets the way they did it.

Jmho that once they get their new plant up and running and their new paper machine operating in early 2017,
it should be up for a raise by some time in 2018. Maybe earlier.

CEO says they are shooting for $2.50 to $3.40 in earnings once everything is up and running. That's a 56%
payout ratio on the low end.

Their current 5% yield, with no growth, reinvested, out runs 3% yield and 8% growth for ten years before falling behind. A few raises and it won't even be close.
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