Okmolly
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What matter is Return of capitaldoesn't matter dividend stock or not. what matters is the total returns
What matter is Return of capitaldoesn't matter dividend stock or not. what matters is the total returns
>=0% lorWhat matter is Return of capital
Lmao I already ROC:25% 6 month>=0% lor
then this is more than just ROC maLmao I already ROC:25% 6 month
net net 0? excluding transaction costIf the dividends are 50%, but share price drops by 50%, are you making a gain?
If the stock lasts long enough, you will gainIf the dividends are 50%, but share price drops by 50%, are you making a gain?
If the dividends are 50%, but share price drops by 50%, are you making a gain?
No they don’t. Dividends can also be paid out of asset sales. Many stocks have dividend payout ratios in excess of 100%. Moreover, it’s fairly easy to juice earnings over the short term. It’s much harder to sustain or grow earnings.dividends have to be paid out of earnings.
care to share examples of such "dividends"?No they don’t. Dividends can also be paid out of asset sales. Many stocks have dividend payout ratios in excess of 100%. Moreover, it’s fairly easy to juice earnings over the short term. It’s much harder to sustain or grow earnings.
Sure. Pfizer (PFE) paid quarterly dividends of 42 cents per share on 2023 annual reported earnings of 37 cents per share. That's a high dividend payout ratio, obviously. But it's not automatically a cause for concern because Pfizer's 2023 earnings were impacted by special COVID-19 charges. Nonetheless, Pfizer evidently had to use corporate assets to sustain that dividend through that low reported earnings year.care to share examples of such "dividends"?
Yes, that happens too. But I'm not aware of any specific labeling requirement, at least not that straightforwardly.In the past, I have received special payments and it seems that they are labelled as 'return of capital' to distinguish them from dividends.
Oversimplifying only slightly, the Yieldmax ETFs seem like a great way to convert capital gains on some high volatility stocks (which are tax free for most residents of Singapore) into capital losses plus dividends (which incur 30% dividend withholding tax for most residents of Singapore) — and to pay a hefty management fee for the privilege. Plus the ETF shares are U.S. estate taxable, although the individual stocks/ETFs they bet on are, too.
I just did very cursory reading on this, but apparently "Return of Capital" dividends aren't subject to dividend withholding tax at all, and the various Yieldmax ETFs seem to report >90% return on capital in their recent filings.For most residents of Singapore the capital gains tax rate is zero and the dividend tax rate is 30% (on U.S. stocks and ETFs), so any conversion of capital gains into dividends is automatically bad from a tax point of view. It's especially bad when the conversion is inefficient, as it has to be when an actively managed fund does it.
Maybe, but presumably that's dead money (zero interest) in the meantime.Data points seem to suggest that IBKR returns any withheld tax once it receives the 1099 filing from Yieldmax.
After about 1.5 years, NAV of all the 8 ETFs I bought have decreased by varying levels. However, taking into account the dividends / distributions (even after WHT if any), 4 out of the 8 ETFs are up 20 to 80%, the other 4 are down by 1-10% only. Overall I am still positive. I think another 6-12 months I would have got back all my capital and I should just be playing with house money and just continue getting distributions / dividends until they go to zero (possible if NAV keep decreasing?). Think the key to playing this is to buy at a low or decent price, so that the rate of receiving the high yield is faster than the rate of NAV going to zero (so far has not happened to any of the ETFs).I have small sums in TSLY, AMZY, GOOY, NVDY, AMDY, FBY, MSFO, APLY for 3-6 months. So far so good. Hesitating on CONY and NFLY. I do also have small sums in the actual underlying shares as well. Yeah don't overcommit. Treat this like high risk crypto investment, except that I think the risk is lower but still a bit high.
I read and I suppose you did not reinvest the payouts back to their respective ETFs? So only a few able to see NAV growing without itAfter about 1.5 years, NAV of all the 8 ETFs I bought have decreased by varying levels. However, taking into account the dividends / distributions (even after WHT if any), 4 out of the 8 ETFs are up 20 to 80%, the other 4 are down by 1-10% only. Overall I am still positive. I think another 6-12 months I would have got back all my capital and I should just be playing with house money and just continue getting distributions / dividends until they go to zero (possible if NAV keep decreasing?). Think the key to playing this is to buy at a low or decent price, so that the rate of receiving the high yield is faster than the rate of NAV going to zero (so far has not happened to any of the ETFs).
Yup, no reinvestment. Would be pointless to me if the dividends or distributions received need to be reinvested.I read and I suppose you did not reinvest the payouts back to their respective ETFs? So only a few able to see NAV growing without it