11Mon·

41 distributing dividend ETFs

-Since many people have little time or desire to analyze hundreds of stocks and read the news and quarterly reports, dividend ETFs make it easy and stress-free to implement a dividend strategy.

-If a position in the index reduces or cancels its dividends, it is automatically removed from the index and replaced.

-With a junior custody account for children, the saver's allowance (€1,000) and the basic allowance (€11,604) can be utilized each year with dividends even without selling. This means up to €12,604 per child in 2024. In 2025 it is expected to be more than €13,000. The link in the bio / profile description will take you to the Juniordepot (advertising).

-I myself had the iShares UK Dividend and the iShares Euro Stoxx Select Dividend 30 ETF many years ago. Thanks to steady dividend growth, after a while I was already receiving 10% dividends p.a. from both ETFs. Unfortunately, I later sold the ETFs to sink the money into Wirecard. Biggest mistake. Incidentally, the MSCI World ETF only pays a dividend of 1.16%.

-The information provided by the broker/bank on ETFs is often incorrect and no longer up to date. It is therefore better to check directly with the issuer.

-Of course, the dividend yield is not the only quality feature. There is also the dividend increase, the performance of the ETF and it must fit your own portfolio and strategy.

- Which dividend ETFs do you have?

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28 Comments

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Exactly my strategy. A solid dividend yield paired with good dividend growth & price through ETFs.

At the moment it consists of 3 ETFs for me
$GGRP
$FGEQ
$TDIV

This should enable you to achieve good dividend growth of 7-10% p.a.
Nevertheless, you start with a solid dividend yield of 2.5-3%.
The overall performance of ~11% p.a. also has nothing to hide.

Of course, this is all based on the last few years.
I am aware that things can also go worse.
Nevertheless, so far I'm delighted with how easy and carefree a dividend growth strategy can be thanks to ETFs.
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@Banana_Millionaire These are exactly what I have in my savings plan. I think it's a good selection. I have also covered the emerging markets via Fidelity.
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@Banana_Millionaire I find your approach very interesting. I'm still fairly new to investing, so I wanted to ask you why you have the Widsomtree in there? Doesn't it pay out quite little
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@Maddy-0 well, my point is to create a good mix. With 3 ETFs mixed together, you get your own personal dividend yield, dividend growth and overall performance.
The Wisdomtree achieves the best performance, the Vaneck the highest payout and the Fidelity is a good mix of both.
All 3 together currently come to the values I mentioned above.
@Banana_Millionaire Sounds good. I'm just afraid of having too many afterwards. Currently have the basis with $SPYI and XTrackers information USA technology. Would like to adopt your strategy, just have to check that there are already 5 of them😂
How much do you invest in each of them? All the same?
Oh, to answer your question:
Nasdaq 100 covered call ( IE00BM8R0J59)
Super Dividend USD (IE00077FRP95)
Stoxx Global Dividend 100 EUR (DE000A0F5UH1)
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Great post!

I don’t know how many here need to deal with “Witholding tax” this is usually 15%. As I am not in the U.S or EU I will pay dividend tax and on top of that, the 15%. This is because I have invested in U.S. based ETF’s

I recently found out about UCITS ETF’s which deal with the witholding tax themselves. This is great for me as I need to divest from U.S. based ETF’s and instead own European UCITS ETF’ which invest in U.S. companies.

Anybody here that can confirm that my facts are right? Do most of you buy UCITS ETF’s?

Thx
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Super contribution. Many thanks @Techaktien.
Since I'm going for dividends, this is exactly my topic 😘
I'll take a look at the ETFs later today 💰 We're still sitting at the breakfast table 😎
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@BamBamInvest Yes, cool. Lots of good ideas. I'll take a closer look at them all and also the chat history. 👍
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Thanks for the great overview
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The challenge that high-dividend ETFs have is the falling prices, or in other words: dividends eat up returns. I keep my distance from ETFs. However, there are good individual stocks that combine growth and dividends, such as these $MUX, $HTGC, $MAIN or stable American stocks such as $PG etc. However, I think your strategy with the junior portfolio is very good.
I have mainly growth and some dividends in it.
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Merci 🖖, I follow a dividend strategy and don't have much to do with ETFs, 2 of them with irregular savings plans. I will take a closer look at one or the other. Nice overview
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Thanks for the overview. I am also considering using an ETF.
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For the dividend portion of my portfolio, I hold the JEPG, JP Morgan Global Equity ETF, which pays out monthly, plus about 6 stocks with 4-8% dividend yields that are not in the ETF and that I find interesting. Sometimes I also think about whether I should get out of the stocks and take another ETF with quarterly distributions instead... But somehow I can't really warm to any of them 😊 Your overview is definitely very helpful!
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Not entirely unimportant for the children's account: From a certain income onwards, Bafög etc. becomes difficult.
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Good overview
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-30% tax 🇩🇪
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Ftse all world paired with ftse high dividend and good is ❤️
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Thanks horny Übersicht👍🏼
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I am currently saving at $WEBG
Which other ETF would you recommend that I can save on the side?
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Which are the ETFs with the highest dividend growth, how can I recognize them?
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Are these percentages yearly based or based on the given times paid?
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