Last tranche in $NOVO B (+3,11%) purchased - position complete. ✅
Remain loyal to the share - regardless of market noise. 🐍

Postos
863Last tranche in $NOVO B (+3,11%) purchased - position complete. ✅
Remain loyal to the share - regardless of market noise. 🐍
Amazon Pharmacy Expands Access to New Wegovy® Pill with Insurance and Cash-Pay Options $NOVO B (+3,11%)
$NVO (+3,05%)
$AMZN (+0,04%)
We continue with insights into the goings-on of the dividend opi. If you missed the first part, you can find it here: Dividendenopi inside Teil 1 Dividendenopi Rewind2025
As the second part is less about shares, I'll at least start with the rest and the question from @Epi about the Zockeropi. I still have one position each in the, let's say, hidden area of $EKT (-0,82%) and $NOVO B (+3,11%) each. Neither trading nor dividend stocks as I see it, so they are bobbing around in the middle of nowhere. Both are currently in negative territory and have a current market value of around €30,000. To be honest, I still don't really know what I'm going to do with them. In my opinion, EKT is still a rock-solid value and clearly undervalued. Despite all my understanding for the delays, which are apparently through no fault of their own, they have to deliver this year. Otherwise I will actually realize the losses, but they are absolutely manageable. And about Novo, well, what more can I say... Ignored the warnings during the high phase and took the crash in its stride. Due to the recovery over the last few days, the share is moderately down by just over 10%. Depending on my mood on the day, however, this could quickly disappear.
And to ensure that my strategy as a whole doesn't get boring and that the gambling child in me is kept in mind so that it doesn't do anything stupid with larger investments, I have turned more intensively to short-term trades since the middle of last year. In June with $DEFI (+1,26%) and $HIMS (-3,63%) initial modest successes have encouraged and "hooked" me by, among other things @Multibagger one or two copy trades. My play money is strictly limited to a maximum of 5% of my total capital. I haven't invested that much yet, but despite everything $IREN (+4,65%) , $CIFR (+4,4%) and some other trades have brought me nice profits on the side. Most recently I closed yesterday $AII (-7,44%) closed yesterday with 40% plus. The largest position in the trading portfolio at the moment is again $IREN (+4,65%) with EK 35€ and a slight plus. The rest, $CA1 (+0%) , $DEFI (+1,26%) , $LYC (+1,25%) , $NB (+0,27%) and $null (+3,45%) are not doing so well at the moment, which is why I am currently in the red. I currently have € 20,000 invested there, but the holding period for these shares and the long is also designed for a maximum of 6 months, so I will look again in April.
So far so good.... Now comes the outing and the boring part of my investments, which still make up the majority of the capital invested. Expiring fixed-term deposits have already been and will be put into the market. Due to my age, I tend to be a bit conservative when it comes to choosing my broker and would have a stomach ache with a neo-broker for this amount. For a while I had my investments diversified with S-Broker, ING and Consors. Overnight deposits at various institutions in recent years, where the best new customer offers were available. I'm still hopping and currently have a good €370,000 in call money. The best interest rate for 12 months until mid-26 is with BBVA, where I'm realizing 3.25% thanks to a promotional bonus. Volkswagenbank, Fordbank, Stellantisbank and Renaultbank are always offering special promotions for existing customers with interest conditions to compensate for inflation. The advantage of all the aforementioned banks is the monthly interest payout for regular income, and the trend at the moment is again towards higher offers for new customers of just under 3%, so I will be shifting around a little over the next few days and weeks. Longer-term fixed-term deposits will gradually expire over the next 2 years, where I have conditions from the beginning of 24, e.g. at Kommunal Kredit for 4.5%, the others are between 3.4 and 4.1%. In total, this currently amounts to € 125,000 with annual interest payments for further cash flow.
The third large chunk, and therefore the rest of my capital, is invested in bonds and certificates. More on this in a moment. Where do I have my securities account now? Drum roll... 😇😇At the savings bank, sic!🤷♀️ At a large savings bank in the big city around the corner as part of a private banking agreement. I have an all-in-fee that costs really fat fees every year. 1.25% of my average portfolio value p.a. And that's a four-figure sum at the top end. Before everyone faints or thinks I'm out of my depth, a few words of explanation and insight into my decision. I can trade where I want, as much as I want and what I want within the limits of these fees. Of course, I can also pay less for a used small car, but as I mentioned, it's just not for me. One of the reasons I took this route was because of the annual costs I would otherwise incur with ING and S-Broker. Given the trading volumes, that wasn't exactly low either. For me, these costs would have been costs anyway. The decisive advantage, in addition to almost 24-hour all-round support and a personal portfolio manager, lies in trading certificates. I like to use fixed coupon express certificates for cash flow. They are available on many stocks. This year I was / am invested in Siemens, LVMH, BMW, Daimler Truck, Vonovia, Renk, among others. They all had / have interest rates between 6.5% and 9.75%. Latest "deal" a certificate on $R3NK (+0,49%) on 29.12 with 11.7% and a new one now starting in January with 11.5%. The interest is paid out quarterly on a pro rata basis and makes a not insignificant contribution to my monthly income. I am always offered these certificates for subscription before they are issued, the issue premium is waived as part of my agreement and I receive a large part of the "internal commission" from the savings bank, which is called a customer bonus. I am attaching the statement of my Renk certificate from December 29th to make it easier to understand.
In this case, with an otherwise regular issue price of € 1,010 for a € 1,000 share, I have in any case already "recouped" part of my fees (saved issue premium plus lower subscription price), with other providers and lower interest rates this can be up to 2.5% and more. These express certificates usually come back in the next 6 to 9 months when the early payout levels are reached and I get back the € 1,000 nominal value, plus the interest accrued up to that point. Unfortunately, I have to pay tax on the difference between my cheaper purchase and the nominal value as a profit. The money is then immediately reinvested in corresponding new certificates. This means that I have a regular annual circulation with a corresponding volume, not every certificate is returned, and in total this recoups my fees. Sounds a bit like a milkmaid's calculation, but it works out. We can discuss this in more detail. For now, this is only part of my motivation. However, these certificates are one of the main pillars of my cash flow and are relatively default-proof thanks to downward barriers of 40 to 50%, but of course you have to look at the underlying securities.
Other investments are in capped bonus certificates with a barrier. These offer no ongoing cash flow, but "reward" you with decent returns if they perform well and are particularly suitable for sideways or slightly falling markets. For both variants, it must be said that dividends from the reference stocks are excluded and a strong upward trend in the individual underlying stocks does not lead to overperformance and in the latter case is also limited (capped) or leads to premature liquidation in the case of express certificates. If you keep abreast of the market, the risks are manageable and the maturities are limited to a maximum of 2 years, usually less.
There are other variants of these certificates, if there is interest I would present these in a separate series. They are not performance boosters, but with the right selection they can lead to stability and ongoing cash flow or pre-defined potential price gains even if the markets do not perform as everyone would like.
That's it from my side, I've let my pants down and shown how I, as an old fart with an appropriate amount of capital, try to structure my monthly returns without taking excessive risks and why and how I do it. Perhaps it will help some investors who are not so risk-averse to think about alternatives. I would like to thank everyone who has stuck with me to the end and see you soon. Your Dividend Topi


While the world outside was drifting into the Christmas hustle and bustle and I was consciously spending more time with my parents, little dramas were unfolding at the markets. My class leader $AVGO (+3,94%) lost value, as did the main share portfolio. But honestly? I only really noticed this at the end of the year. The second half of December had long since cast its spell over me, especially Christmas and the time between the years when everything slows down a little. Instead of rushing around, I reflected and did some soul-searching. Meanwhile, the automated systems continued to do their job. Savings plans were running and dividends were flowing.
At the end of the year $LTC (+0,03%) Properties was the last buy of the year. Alongside $O (+0,08%) and $MAIN (-1,35%) this monthly payer should continue to grow. The business model has a future and I am building something here step by step.
And now enough of the quiet, time for a review.
Overall performance
It was business as usual as I enjoyed the end of the year. Negative effects passed me by, that's just part of it.
My key performance indicators for my overall portfolio at a glance:
Performance & volume
$AVGO (+3,94%) gives up 15% and also pulls ahead of other tech stocks such as $NFLX (-1,81%) and $GOOGL (+1,15%) my main stock portfolio down. The other portfolios rise, but cannot compensate for this. That's part of investing. When I look at the top 5, I notice that defensive stocks such as $BAC (+0,01%) and $WMT (+1,66%) are rising slightly again. I like that, it's a stinking boring business model, which isn't sexy at all, but provides me with steady share price growth and a nice cash flow.
The five red lanterns naturally go to the same weakening candidates (by performance). Well, if something is going well, something must be going badly.
Size of individual stock positions by volume in the overall portfolio:
Share of equities (%) in the total portfolio (and associated securities account):
$AVGO (+3,94%) 3.06% (main share portfolio)
$WMT (+1,66%) 1.76% (main share portfolio)
$GOOGL (+1,15%) 1.51% (main share portfolio)
$BAC (+0,01%) 1.50% (main share portfolio)
$NFLX (-1,81%) 1.38% (main share portfolio)
Smallest individual share positions by volume in the overall portfolio:
Share (%) of the total portfolio (and associated securities account):
$NOVO B (+3,11%) 0.48% (main share portfolio)
$BATS (+1,34%) 0.54% (main share portfolio)
$GIS (+0,78%) 0.55% (crypto follow-on deposit)
$MDLZ (+2,06%) 0.56% (main share portfolio)
$CPB (+0,53%) 0.58% (main share portfolio)
Top-performing individual stocks
Shares with performance since initial purchase (%) (and the respective portfolio):
$AVGO (+3,94%) : +328% (main stock portfolio)
$NFLX (-1,81%) +101% (main share portfolio)
$GOOGL (+1,15%) +115% (main share portfolio)
$WMT (+1,66%) +91% (main share portfolio)
$BAC (+0,01%) + 81% (main share portfolio)
Flop performer individual stocks
Shares with performance since initial purchase (%) (and the respective portfolio):
$NKE (+1,35%) : -35% (main stock portfolio)
$GIS (+0,78%) -34% (main share portfolio)
$TGT (-0,26%) : -33% (main share portfolio)
$CPB (+0,53%) : -30% (main share portfolio)
$NOVO B (+3,11%) -24% (main share portfolio)
Asset allocation
Equities and ETFs currently determine my asset allocation.
ETFs: 41.7%
Equities: 58.2%
Crypto: 0.0%
P2P: less than 0.01%
Investments and subsequent purchases
In December, I slightly increased the savings plans from my net salary and reinvestment. I invested the following amounts in savings plans:
Planned savings plan amount from the fixed net salary: €1,040 [previously: €1,030]
Planned savings plan amount from the fixed net salary, incl. reinvested dividends according to plan size: €1,060 [previously: € 1,040]
Savings ratio of the savings plans to the fixed net salary: 50.24% [49,75%]
In addition, there were the following additional investments from returns, refunds, cashback, etc. as one-off savings plans/repurchases:
Subsequent purchases/one-off savings plans as cashback annuities from refunds: €40.00
Subsequent purchases/one-off savings plans as a cashback annuity from bonuses: € 0.00
Subsequent purchases from other surpluses: € 108.23
Automatically reinvested dividends by the broker: €7.03 (function is only activated for an old custody account, as I otherwise prefer to control the reinvestment myself)
Unscheduled purchases were made on various securities accounts outside the regular savings plans:
Number of unscheduled purchases: 9
40.00€ for $FGEQ (+0,79%)
56.94€ for $ULVR (+1,15%)
88.72€ for $LTC (+0,03%)
After the Magnum spinoff at Unilever, I sold the booked position a few days too late in order to shift it into Unilever with some cash. It was sold:
37,43€ from $MICC (+0,13%)
Magnum Ice Cream is neither in my freezer nor in my portfolio.
Passive income from dividends
I received € 132.75 in dividends (€ 152.20 in the same month last year). This corresponds to a change of -12.78% compared to the same month last year. The reason for the decline is that distributions from my three large Vanguard ETFs no longer arrived on time. Further key figures:
Number of dividend payments: 32
Number of payment days: 16 days
Average dividend per payment: €4.15
average dividend per payday: €8.30
The top three payers in the month under review were:
My passive income from dividends (and some interest) mathematically covered 7.94% of my expenses for the month under review. Acceptable for a weak month with medium-high expenses (by my standards).
Crypto performance
I am currently completely on the sidelines here. It will be a while before I get back in.
Performance comparison: portfolio vs. benchmarks
A comparison of my portfolio with two important ETFs shows the TTWROR in the current month (and since the beginning):
My portfolio: -0.46% (since I started: +79.52%)
$VWRL (+0,66%) +0.06% (since my start: 66.12%)
$VUSA (+0,66%) +1.00% (since my start: 63.76%)
After outperforming the ETFs last month, I am underperforming this time. 2026 will catch up. 🤗
Key risk figures
Here are my risk figures for the month under review:
Maximum drawdown: YTD: 17.17% (month under review: 1.56%)
Maximum drawdown duration: 702 days [since inception] (reporting month: 26 days)
Volatility: YTD: 12.00% (in the month under review: 1.33%)
Sharpe Ratio: YTD: 0.48 (in the month under review: -3.92)
Semi-volatility: YTD: 9.35% (in the month under review: 0.98%)
The maximum drawdown of 702 days since the beginning is still reminiscent of the tough phase 2022-2023, before the year-end rally started at the end of 2023. In December itself, the decline of 1.56% was marginal and a sign that the major turbulence of the year was over.
My Sharpe Ratio has improved to 0.48 YTD, showing that for every unit of risk, I get almost half a unit of return above the risk-free rate. Volatility has fallen from a wild 28% over the course of the year to a reassuring 12% YTD, while semi-volatility is down to just 9.35%. That shows: My portfolio does fluctuate, but the risk of loss is lower than the overall volatility would suggest. December was particularly quiet with a semivolatility of 0.98%.
What remains? Confirmation of my strategy: think long-term, keep calm and buy when things get cheap. 2025 ends solidly despite weakness.
Outlook
Back in the November review, I announced my investment of the Christmas bonus. Of course, I wasn't talking about money from my employer, but simply what I received for Christmas plus a few pennies I had lying around at home. I posted the reinvestment on the same day in the week between the years.
I also donated a few dividends, the fourth and final donation was made in December. You can read more about this in the Instagram Story. I think donations are important, because those who have should also give something.
I'll end this review with another personal point, which I already covered in the August and November reviews.
Loyal readers of my reviews will know that in the summer I was diagnosed with an aneurysm of the ascending aorta near my heart as a result of a bicuspid and insufficient aortic valve. It was an accidental finding that took some of the danger out of this ticking time bomb thanks to close monitoring, but it is still ticking. When I look back on the year 2025, I realize how this thing has permanently changed my thinking and my approach. Of course, it's an ongoing process, but I'm less likely to fall back into old patterns. Even though the cardiology appointment in December found that the thing hasn't grown any further, which will give me a little more time before surgery, I know the day will come. It's unclear when, but like a meteoroid hurtling towards the earth, there is something on the horizon. You just don't know when it's going to hit. The fact that the 43-44mm has remained stable (and no more) is a gain of time for me that I want to use. I have a lot of plans to develop new sources of income, significantly expand my social media presence, implement new habits, continue to work on my fitness and focus on life and the positive. Despite the diagnosis, 2025 will be a great year for me. And I'm going to go one better in 2026.
Thank you for reading. I wish you all the best for 2026!
👉 You can also read my portfolio review for December on Instagram from January 8, 2026 (and budget review from 9.1.26).
📲 In addition to the portfolio and budget review, there are currently three posts a week: @frugalfreisein
!!! Please pay close attention to the spelling of my alias. Unfortunately, there are too many fake and phishing accounts on social media. I have already been "copied" several times. !!!
👉 How was your month in the portfolio? Do you have any tops & flops to report? Leave your thoughts in the comments!
I thought I'd write a few thoughts on my portfolio and why I hold these positions.
Basically:
I don't try to time the market or rebalance every week. It's more important for me to understand what I'm holding and why, so that I can relax during weaker phases.
$IWDA (+0,77%) MSCI World
My foundation. Gives me stability and takes the pressure off having to solve everything via individual stocks.
$NVDA (+0,21%)
$AMD (+0,52%) NVIDIA & AMD
Clear focus on AI and computing power. High valuation, but also real demand and massive cash flows. Fluctuates strongly, but is a deliberate part of my portfolio.
$PATH (-1,6%) UiPath
Higher risk, but also high optionality. Automation is still a long way off. Small position that can grow.
$ILMN (-3,46%) Illumina
Heavily penalized, a lot of uncertainty, but still extremely relevant in technological terms. For me, a classic turnaround bet with patience and therefore higher weighting.
$ALB (+1,63%) Albemarle
Cyclical, unloved, which is precisely why it is interesting. Lithium will not disappear, even if the market feels otherwise.
$TTWO (-0,82%) Take-Two Interactive
GTA 6 is priced in.
The only question is how. Plan to hold the position tactically rather than forever.
$NOVO B (+3,11%) Novo Nordisk
Quality. Strong growth, huge market, clear market leadership.
$ADBE (-1,51%) Adobe
Market leader, recurring revenue, AI integration. Not a hype play, but a solid long-term business.
My plan for 2026:
Continue to invest monthly
Don't put everything into shares straight away
Use setbacks
don't sell anything just because it gets uncomfortable!
I realize that this is not a perfect portfolio.
But it's my system and I sleep soundly with it.
I would also be very happy to hear any thoughts or questions :)
I would be interested:
How are you positioned in 2026?
More defensive, more risk or just carry on as before?
Have a nice day!
Novo Nordisk will remain a heavyweight in the healthcare sector in 2026. Anyone getting in now is betting on sustainable growth in the obesity market and regulatory stability.
I tell it like it is:
I judge by numbers, not opinions. And the fact is that everything "still" looks good so far.
However, always remain realistic and diversify.
Let's see how it turns out.
What is your opinion?
Now my $NOVO B (+3,11%) position looks really nice again with a 10% total return.
You just have to ignore the fact that I sold my position, which was at -30%, on 30.12.2025 for the capital gains tax loss compensation.
Did you also offset losses by selling at the end of the year, or do you not care?
Principais criadores desta semana