One of the reasons I love the investment process so much is because every time I turn around I realize that I have learned something new. Just when you think you have “the game” down, something comes along and knocks you on your ass. Take those dividend cuts by Bank of America, Citigroup, and General Electric for crying out loud. GE was never ever supposed to have to cut its dividend. But it did and many of dividend investors learned a valuable lesson – never assume that dividend growth, even from the largest of blue-chip companies, is a foregone conclusion. That is the one of many dividend investing lessons I have learned through the years. Here are a few more I came up with.[ad#tdg-embedded]
1. Diversified dividend income is more important that growing dividend income
It does not matter how fast or how high that dividend growth is for a particular company if you are not diversified. As I to some extent, and many others like me learned, in truly awful markets broad diversification through a solid asset allocation is what is most important. No amount of dividend growth will make up for a portfolio that tanks by 75% because of improper asset allocation.
2. The term blue-chip is only a media title, not an investment philosophy
I believe the term “blue chip” has done great damage to many investors. It has created a sense of safety that lead people to drop their guards. This false sense of security creates huge risk in many a portfolio. I have learned not to get sucked into the feeling of safety by media labels placed on stocks. The numbers are what tells me if a stock is good or not (and even that can be a problem).
3. Even the best stock analysis can lead to stupid decisions
Mutual fund companies are very good at convincing us that investing is hard. It really isn’t as hard as they make it sound. The most important things is to ensure you have a sound asset allocation. With that you will be off to a good start. However, really good and reliable stock analysis takes time and even done with the highest degree of rigor can still turn out to be bad calls. At the end of the day it is very difficult for us as investors to foresee what the market will bring us.
Finally, because of these difficulties I have learned that I must form the core of my portfolio with broad based index funds across a number of asset classes. This provides effective diversification that is not tied to guessing what the market will do and not tied to a media label such as blue-chip. I still actively invest in individual dividend stocks, but I am always certain that my core is strong so that the benefits of dividend growth will not be overshadowed by a bad portfolio.
Mark Wolfinger
Here’s another lesson that too many people simply don’t recognize:
A bull market makes a genius out of everyone. People buy stocks for no good reason, see them soar – or pay good dividends – and think they have won the game and they will make money forever.
Bear markets make people face reality.
Dividend Growth Investor
Yep, I am a big fan of diversification. I often see over confident investors who believe that by concentrating on 10 stocks they could do it all.. One Bank of America, one American Capital Strategies and then it would take them 2-3 years just to have their income reach its previous highs..
Abby
Hi, thanks for the nice article.
By diversification due you mean diversification across multiple sectors?
Thomas J Venner
Diversification didn’t help much in September ’08, everything but gold and short-term gov’t bonds tanked.
Dividend Growth Investor
Thomas,
Not everything fell by the same amount in september. In addition to that, is picking just a month just to prove a point or for another reason?
Diversification didn’t work well on thursday either 😉