1Yr·

Hello people


I'm toying with the idea of setting up dividend stock savings plans for myself instead of buying individual positions every month. For this I would like to invest in 8-10 stable and "boring" companies (dividend kings & aristocrats preferably) for "eternity". Positions like $JNJ (-1.99%) , $KO (-0.85%) , $O (-2.13%) and $SHELL (+0.01%) I already have and would like to expand these now by savings plan.


Other companies that would come into question would be, for example. $MCD (-0.23%) , $SBUX (+0.3%) , $AAPL (+0.27%) (even if it is more of a growth stock) $PG (+1.52%) , $NKE (+1.3%) , $TTE (-1.32%) and $NESN (-1.02%)


What do you think of the strategy? Are my selected positions okay or have I forgotten important dividend stocks that should not be missing?


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10 Comments

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At the end of the day, you don't know if the companies will actually be successful for an eternity. General Electric and Kodak send their regards. Were the Apple and Microsoft of the 70s and 80s, today they no longer play a role. The easiest for a savings plan seems to me a DivGrowth ETF. E.g. $GGRP The rebalanced steadily.
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@Epi so after all the most boring version of investing shares. But I think it is also the safest option. Thanks for your answer
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@Epi how GE went to the dogs, that was already art and incompetence.
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Funny, it's the other way around for me. I have just deleted all savings plans and now invest by individual purchase.
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@DividendenWaschbaer I want to spend my time more on "making money" instead of "saving money" for the time being
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You want to go for dividends and call $AAPL 😬😬 so Apple is anything but a dividend stock
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@Kronos_ I have written in brackets that it is more of a growth stock. Nevertheless, they pay a small dividend, which makes them a dividend stock. I am also very convinced of Apple and it should not be missing from my portfolio.
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In itself a good strategy. But be careful with foreign companies with dividends, keyword withholding tax.
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Deleted User
1Yr
Comment was deleted
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@California_Dreamin thanks for the answer! $MSFT and $WM were also on my radar.
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