In yesterday’s post on The Dividend Key, the importance and value of reinvested dividends was presented. Today, I am going to present the findings of a study by Robert D. Arnott that broke down investment returns into their individual components. The study looked at three sources of returns for investors:
1. Inflation – the amount a stock grows just through inflationary trends
2. Valuation expansion – the company becomes more valuable and therefore so does the stock price
3. Dividends – the yield received when a stock is purchased
4. Real Dividend Growth – the increase in dividends a company may provide year after year
The study pulled a crazy amount of data going back to 1802 and found that the total annualized return for this period (1802 – 2002) was 7.9%. The interesting part was what made up this return. The graphic below highlights the findings and shows that a total of 5.8% of that return comes from dividends (5% from dividends + 0.8% from real dividend growth):
Put another way, 73% of the growth in U.S. equities going back 200 years have come from dividends. That is in the form of pure dividends and AND a company raising its dividends. This is very powerful stuff we are dealing with here.
Source: Tweedy Browne Company LLC (link opens a .pdf document)
(Photo Credit: daniel wildman)
Dividends4Life
That is some impressive information. Thanks for sharing it!
Best Wishes,
D4L
Dividends RULE
Dividend Guy- I think your next analysis should be TD Bank and Scotiabank. Would be interested to see those ones. Thanks.
Chester
I’m just getting into 2 new investment vehicles – dividends and gold. I’ll be watching your blog for insights!