Showing posts with label TX. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TX. Show all posts
19 Cheap Stocks With A Free Cashflow Yield Over 6.67%
Everyone needs cheap stocks for a
solid return. But what cheap really means depends on your growth expectations.
I tell you that
earnings are not equal to free cash flow. Some companies need much money to
grow or they put large amounts of cash into the business to keep them alive due
to high amortizations.
If you look for
cheap stocks, you also need to cheap price to free cash flow ratios.
Today I would like
to introduce a few dozen or and a few more stocks with a cheap price to free cash
flow ratio (less than 15). A ratio under 15 indicates that the potential payout
yield is over 6.67%.
In addition, I've
only listed those stocks with a positive earnings growth outlook for the next
five years. That's in my view a method to filter only well-running business.
Despite the tight
criteria, the screen also produced some struggling companies like BHP or Rio
Tinto. I like them for sure but I do believe that they are not worth investing
while the commodity price still low or at multi-year lows.
Here are the
results from my screen...
5 High Yield Dividend Stocks With High Beta Ratios
While investing in
stocks with high dividends may be a good scheme to reinforce your loss-aversion
principle, playing the market to dodge volatility requires some extra cautious
steps. Beta measures the extent to which a fund’s return may be affected or how
much the price fluctuates owing to market conditions.
A high beta shows
normally how the performance of a single stock differs from the overall market.
The higher the ratio, the bigger the out- or underperformance develops.
It's great if you
like to be different, a star or a looser on the market.
Today I like to
show you those higher capitalized dividend stocks with beta ratios over 1.5 and
dividend yields over 5%. In order to keep the over levered stocks off the list,
I only observed stocks with a debt to equity ratio under 1.
14 stocks
fulfilled my criteria of which eight have a low forward P/E.
Here are the results...
Here are the results...
Best Dividend Paying Stocks As Of February 2013 | 25 Top Stock Buy List
Best Dividend Paying
Stocks Lists By Dividend Yield – Stock, Capital, Investment. Each month, I discover the best growth income picks with attractive dividend
payments and growth figures. I’ve tried to summarize some significant
fundamentals in order to screen the whole capital markets by interesting investment
opportunities.
These are my criteria:
Market Capitalization: > 1 Billion
Price/Earnings Ratio: > 0 < 100
Dividend Yield: > 3 < 20
Return on Investment: > 10 < 100
Operating Margin: > 10 < 100
10 Year Revenue Growth: > 8 < 200
10 Year EPS Growth: > 10 < 100
The results from the screen
are distinguished compared to the normal screens I made every day. Here is long-term
growth a major aspect and some new names are on the list. The stocks are not typically
Dividend Champions or stocks with a very long dividend growth history but they have
managed a stronger growth of sales and income.
For me, the best
equity investment is a stock with good fundamentals and a convincing equity
story. If this stock is also attractive valuated with a P/E below 15 or even 20
if the debt is low, it could promise good returns. This month, 25 companies fulfilled
my screening criteria of which six have a high yield.
13 Dividend Growth Potentials With Really Cheap Price Ratios
Stocks
with dividend growth potential and cheap price ratios originally published at
"long-term-investments.blogspot.com". I often publish
sheets and lists of dividend growth stocks. Mostly I use Dividend Champions,
Achievers or Contender lists. All stocks from the lists have a consecutive
dividend growth of more than 10 years.
I ever try to discover the best stocks with the most attractive fundamentals in order to get the best results. But these lists have one big failure: They include also stocks with high debt and low growth. Not enough some of them pay a dividend which is bigger than the earnings per share of the recent quarters.
Those companies are on the edge to cut the dividend payments. If they do so, they would be kicked off the lists and you sit on a low yielding stock and wait for a recovery which could costs you 5 or 10 years to realize a positive return.
I am a dividend growth investor and made most of my money with dividend growth stocks. But if I am honest, the biggest returns I made were with stocks at a lower yield and higher growth. That’s the reason why I always look for stocks with not a perfect dividend growth history but a more attractive debt and growth situation.
Today I like to highlight some dividend potentials, stocks with potential to boost dividends over the next five years or so. My list includes 110 companies and I show you the cheapest stocks measured by a forward P/E ratio of less than 10.
Thirteen companies have such a low P/E ratio of which twelve are currently recommended to buy. This alone shows the quality of my screen compared to the Dividend Champions lists.
I ever try to discover the best stocks with the most attractive fundamentals in order to get the best results. But these lists have one big failure: They include also stocks with high debt and low growth. Not enough some of them pay a dividend which is bigger than the earnings per share of the recent quarters.
Those companies are on the edge to cut the dividend payments. If they do so, they would be kicked off the lists and you sit on a low yielding stock and wait for a recovery which could costs you 5 or 10 years to realize a positive return.
I am a dividend growth investor and made most of my money with dividend growth stocks. But if I am honest, the biggest returns I made were with stocks at a lower yield and higher growth. That’s the reason why I always look for stocks with not a perfect dividend growth history but a more attractive debt and growth situation.
Today I like to highlight some dividend potentials, stocks with potential to boost dividends over the next five years or so. My list includes 110 companies and I show you the cheapest stocks measured by a forward P/E ratio of less than 10.
Thirteen companies have such a low P/E ratio of which twelve are currently recommended to buy. This alone shows the quality of my screen compared to the Dividend Champions lists.
The Best Dividends On May 03, 2012
Here is a current overview
of the best yielding stocks with a market capitalization over USD 2 billion
that have their ex-dividend date on the next trading day. If your broker
settles your trade today, you will receive the next dividend. A full list of
all stocks with ex-dividend date can be found here: Ex-Dividend Stocks May 03,
2012. In total, 24 stocks and
preferred shares go ex-dividend of which 15 yielding above 3 percent. The
average yield amounts to 3.49 percent.
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