The 8 Rules of Dividend Investing help investors determine what dividend stocks to buy and sell for rising portfolio income over time.
This can help you find the right securities to build or grow your retirement portfolio.
All of The 8 Rules are supported by academic research and ‘common sense’ principles from some of the world’s greatest investors.
Each of The 8 Rules of Dividend Investing are listed below:
- Rule #1: The Quality Rule
- Rule #2: The Bargain Rule
- Rule #3: The Safety Rule
- Rule #4: The Growth Rule
- Rule #5: The Peace of Mind Rule
- Rule #6: The Overpriced Rule
- Rule #7: The Survival of the Fittest Rule
- Rule #8: The Hedge Your Bets Rule
Dividend Investing Rules 1 to 5: What to Buy
Rule # 1 – The Quality Rule
“The single greatest edge an investor can have is a long term orientation”
– Seth Klarman
Common Sense Idea: Invest in high quality businesses that have a proven long-term record of stability, growth, and profitability. There is no reason to own a mediocre business when you can own a high quality business.
How We Implement: Dividend history (the longer the better) is a key component of our Dividend Risk scores. Only stocks with A and B ranked Dividend Risk scores are eligible to be in our Top 10 lists.
Evidence: The Dividend Aristocrats (S&P 500 stocks with 25+ years of rising dividends) have generated a Sharpe Ratio of 1.09 over the last 10 years (through May 2022) versus a Sharpe Ratio of 1.07 for the S&P 500.
Note: Sharpe ratio here is calculated here is 10-year annualized total returns dividend by 10-year annualized standard deviation based on monthly values.
Source: S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats Factsheet
Rule # 2 – The Bargain Rule
“Price is what you pay, value is what you get”
– Warren Buffett
Common Sense Idea: Invest in businesses that pay you the most dividends per dollar you invest. All things being equal, the higher the dividend yield, the better. Additionally, only invest in stocks trading below their historical average valuation multiple to avoid investing in overpriced securities.
How We Implement: We only invest in stocks with dividend yields equal to or greater than the S&P 500’s dividend yield. We also rank stocks by expected total returns to create our Top 10 lists. Dividend yield is one of three components of expected total returns, along with growth returns and valuation multiple changes.
Evidence: The highest yielding quintile of stocks outperformed the lowest yielding quintile of stocks by 1.72% per year from 1928 through 2019.
Source: Dividends: A Review of Historical Returns by Heartland Funds
Rule # 3 – The Safety Rule
“The secret of sound investment in 3 words; margin of safety”
– Benjamin Graham
Common Sense Idea: If a business is paying out all its income as dividends, it has no margin of safety. When a business downturn occurs, the dividend must be reduced. It therefore makes sense to invest in businesses that are not paying out nearly all of their earnings as dividends.
How We Implement: The payout ratio (the lower the better) is a key component of our Dividend Risk scores. Only stocks with A and B ranked Dividend Risk scores are eligible to be in the Top 10.
Evidence: High yield low payout ratio stocks outperformed high yield high payout ratio stocks by 8.2% per year from 1990 to 2006.
Source: High Yield, Low Payout by Barefoot, Patel, & Yao
Rule # 4 – The Growth Rule
“All you need for a lifetime of successful investing is a few big winners”
– Peter Lynch
Common Sense Idea: Invest in businesses that have a history of solid growth. If a business has maintained a high growth rate for several years, they are likely to continue to do so. The more a business grows, the more profitable your investment will become. Dividends cannot grow over the long run without rising earnings.
How We Implement: We rank stocks by expected total return (the higher the better) to create our Top 10 list. Growth rate is one of three components of expected total returns, along with dividend yield and valuation multiple changes.
Evidence: Dividend growers have outperformed non-dividend paying stocks by 1.8% annually from March 31st 1972 through March 31st 2020.
Source: The Appeal of a Dividend Strategy Amid Chaotic Markets from T. Rowe Price
Rule # 5 – The Peace of Mind Rule
“Psychology is probably the most important factor in the market – and one that is least understood”
– David Dreman
Common Sense Idea: Look for businesses that people invest in during recessions and times of panic. These businesses will be more likely to continue paying rising dividends during a recession. We would also expect these securities to, in general, have lower stock price standard deviations.
How We Implement: We assign a qualitative recession score to every security. This recession score factors in to our Dividend Risk scores. Only stocks with A and B ranked Dividend Risk scores are eligible to be in the Top 10.
Evidence: The Sure Passive Income Newsletter uses standard deviation as one of its ranking signals. This newsletter’s recommendations have generated average total returns of 4.1% versus -4.4% for the S&P 500 ETF (SPY) over the same time frame (10/19/20 through morning of 6/17/22).
Dividend Investing Rules 6 & 7: When to Sell
Rule # 6 – The Overpriced Rule
“Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered”
– Unknown
Common Sense Idea: If you are offered $500,000 for a $250,000 house, you take the money. It is the same with a stock. If you can sell a stock for much more than it is worth, you should. Take the money and reinvest it into businesses that pay higher dividends.
How We Implement: We review past recommendations for sells when their expected total returns are below a certain minimum threshold. Low expected total return securities are typically overvalued and tend to have higher P/E ratios.
Evidence: The lowest decile of P/E stocks outperformed the highest decile by 9.02% per year from 1975 to 2010.
Source: The Case for Value by Brandes Investment Partners
Rule # 7 – The Survival of the Fittest Rule
“When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?”
– John Maynard Keynes
Common Sense Idea: If a stock you own reduces its dividend, it is paying you less over time instead of more. This is the opposite of what should happen. You must admit the business has lost its competitive advantage and reinvest the proceeds of the sale into a more stable business.
Financial Rule: We issue a sell or pending sell rating for past recommendations when their dividend is reduced or eliminated. We also analyze past recommendations with an “F” Dividend Risk score for potential sells.
Evidence: Stocks that reduced or eliminated their dividends had a 0% return from 1972 through 2013.
Source: The Power Of Dividends by Hartford Funds (data from Ned Davis Research)
Dividend Investing Rule 8: Portfolio Management
Rule # 8 – The Hedge Your Bets Rule
“The only investors who shouldn’t diversify are those who are right 100% of the time”
– John Templeton
Common Sense Idea: No one is right all the time. Spreading your investments over multiple stocks reduces the impact of being wrong on any one stock.
Financial Rule: Build a diversified portfolio over time. Use The 8 Rules of Dividend Investing to rank high quality dividend growth stocks. Buy the highest ranked stock of which you own the least each month to build your diversified portfolio over time.
Evidence: 90% of the benefits of diversification come from owning just 12 to 18 stocks.
Source: Frank Reilly and Keith Brown, Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management, page 213
Final Thoughts
The 8 Rules of Dividend Investing as applied through our Adaptable Investor eLetter helps investors determine what dividend stocks to buy and sell for rising portfolio income over time.
It is not, however, the only place to find attractive investments.
So where should you invest right now?
Our award-winning analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 5 top under-the-radar income stocks for investors to buy right now…