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Strategies & Market Trends : Paint The Table -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jorj X Mckie who wrote (7924)1/1/2002 1:57:43 PM
From: MulhollandDrive  Respond to of 23786
 
Hi....and Happy New Year..

I don't have a source for you but would have you consider what IBD says about dividends...

investors.com

If all of IBD’s 20 rules are carefully followed (not just the ones you like), your investment results should materially improve:

1. Consider buying stocks with each of last three years’ earnings up 25% or more, return on equity of 17%+ and recent earnings and sales accelerating.

2. Recent quarterly earnings and sales should be up 25% or more.

3. Avoid cheap stocks. Buy higher quality stocks selling $15 a share and higher.

4. Learn how to use charts to spot sound bases and exact buy points. Confine your buys to these points as stocks breakout on big volume increases.

5. Cut every loss when it’s 8% below your cost. Make no exceptions so you can always avoid huge, damaging losses. Never average down in price.

6. Have selling rules on when to sell and take a profit on the way up. Review "When to Sell and Take a Profit" in How to Make Money in Stocks.

7. Buy when market indexes are in an uptrend. Reduce investments and raise cash when general market indexes show five or more days of volume distribution.

8. Read IBD’s "Investor’s Corner" and "The Big Picture" columns to learn how to recognize important tops and bottoms in the market indexes.

9. Buy stocks with a Relative Price Strength Rating of 85 or higher in the IBD SmartSelect® Corporate Ratings.

10. Pick companies with management ownership of stock.

11. Buy mostly in the top six broad industry sectors in IBD’s New High List.

12. Select stocks with increasing institutional sponsorship in recent quarters.

13. Current quarterly after-tax profit margins should be improving and near their peak margins.

14. Don’t buy because of dividends or P-E ratios. Buy the #1 company in an industry in earnings and sales growth, R.O.E., profit margins and product quality.

15. Pick companies with a new product or service.

16. Select mainly New America entrepreneurial companies (they had an IPO within the last 8 years).

17. Check into companies buying back 5% to 10% of their stock and those with new management (what is management’s background?).

18. Don’t try to bottom guess or buy on the way down. Never argue with the market. Forget your pride and ego.

19. Find out if the market is currently favoring big cap or small cap stocks.

20. Do a post-analysis of all your buys and sells. Post on charts where you bought and sold each stock. Evaluate and develop rules to correct your major past mistakes.


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To: Jorj X Mckie who wrote (7924)1/1/2002 5:03:27 PM
From: Perry Ganz  Respond to of 23786
 
Happy New Year JXM
Right here on SI
go to stock screener then to advanced setting and you can type in the yeild that you want and start tossing them out
Perry



To: Jorj X Mckie who wrote (7924)1/1/2002 5:06:41 PM
From: Perry Ganz  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 23786
 
Also
I own this one
biz.yahoo.com
Perry



To: Jorj X Mckie who wrote (7924)1/1/2002 5:25:31 PM
From: Rich1  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 23786
 
Check out KRT.. I own a bunch....



To: Jorj X Mckie who wrote (7924)1/1/2002 5:52:29 PM
From: Libbyt  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 23786
 
that sorts stocks based on dividend yield?

Here is the Yahoo search for that information...which comes up with some eclectic companies.

finance.yahoo.com

IMO the best dividend yielding stocks are usually found with the Real Estate Investment Trusts, REITs.

One that I own is EOP. EOP purchased Spieker Properties as well as I believe Cornerstone Properties... (Spieker Properties was a Bay Area company.)