3Settimana·

Hello, after my last post where I asked which dividend stocks I should buy. I've been thinking about how and why I want to do this, I'm selling a mountain bike soon if anyone is looking for one (santa Cruz Bronson 2019). I also want to earn a passive income and I also want to gain experience with dividends, so now to my consideration


$MO (-1,17%) Altria: consumer staples

$O (-2,72%) Reality Income: real estate

$SHEL (+1,02%) Shell: Energy, why Shell because it also invests in renewable energy.


Do you have another good addition

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9 Commenti

immagine del profilo
Have you ever looked into the concept of dividend growth and what kind of companies have a lot of potential in this respect? At your age, that would be a more sensible investment than companies with a high potential for stagnation. You don't need to start with 3 pensioner shares just to gain experience with dividends.
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immagine del profilo
would definitely not invest in $MO and put a big question mark over $SHEL. I had also considered $SHEL but ultimately decided in favor of $TTE and $CVX as a US stock.
Instead of $MO (as @Transporter already wrote) in $PM and/or $BATS - both are also in my portfolio.
But of course that's just my opinion, if you see it differently and you like your stocks more based on your valuation, it's of course your decision what to invest in.
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Forget Altria, Philip Morris or BAT instead. Instead of Shell, maybe Chevron or Exxon.
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immagine del profilo
3Settimana
What exactly does your bike sale have to do with it?
Do you want to invest the proceeds in these shares or why do you mention that?
Otherwise, I don't see any connection between dividend stocks and selling bikes.

Why no $ALVN or $MUV2?
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immagine del profilo
Yes, exactly, I want to sell the bike and invest the proceeds in shares
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immagine del profilo
3Settimana
Take a look at $ALV and $MUV2. They pay quite high dividends (on which you don't have to pay withholding tax) and also have good share price growth.

For me, $SHEL 's investments in renewable energies would tend to be an exclusion criterion from an investor's point of view. It is very questionable to me whether they are not burning more money at the moment than they will earn in the future.

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