Welcome to the June 20, 2009 edition of The Dividend Guy’s weekly roundup of posts and articles about investing, dividend and non-dividend related.
If you know of other blogs that are covering the topic of investing and dividends, please feel free to let us all know using the comment section below.
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Total dividend income
Indicators of our economic future
Why dividend cuts happen
Medtronic increases dividend
Dividend Portfolios – concentrate or diversify?
Intel dividend stock analysis
Five dividend stocks increasing their dividends
Natural gas ETF
Mastech Holdings research
Boring company with solid profits
Oil Bears
Stock dividends and tickers
The Articles
Got gas?
An income portfolio update
Should he sell?
Watch what ETFs can make you become
ETF investing done right
The Dow is calculated like this
Financial software alternatives now that MS Money is toast
High yield does not equal high return
Flexo’s portfolio
iShares Dow Jones EPAC Select Dividend Index
I bike to work
Does buy and hold still work? Yup!
Index funds and efficiency
Dividend lovers take note
Scary financial ignorance
Hold some cash now
Sizing individual stock holdings
How he became a contrarian
Index funds are great
The ultimate mutual fund
Investment win
I am not a fan of Suze Orman either
Investing 101: Forex
The Richest Man in Babylon
Thanks for reading!
Manshu
Thanks for including my entry on the iShares EPAC Dividend Index!
MLR
Thanks for the link!
That Suze Orman interview was ridiculous!
MLR
Dividend Growth Investor
Thanks for the link!
Dividend Growth Investor
Nicholas Paul
The Dividend Post is first and foremost a stock selection website,
where I profile great companies (U.S. and Canadian equities) that pay increasing dividends. My criteria for stock selection rests on the following sound investment principles rated in order of importance:
1) Solid Business Franchise.
2) Strong past financial performance.
3) Strong Free Cash Flow to fund future dividends and sales growth.
4) History of Dividend Growth portending to continued DIVIDEND GROWTH over time.
5) A good purchase price so as to benefit from capital gains over long periods of time.