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20 Highest Yielding Ex-Dividend Stocks Of The Next Week

Attached is a list of the highest yielding stocks that go ex-dividend within the upcoming week. The full list can be found here: Ex-Dividend Stocks Of The Next Week September 14 - September 20, 2015. Only MidCaps with a market cap over 2 billion were included.

As a result, 49 higher capitalized stocks go ex-dividend in the upcoming week. Six of them have a yield over 5 percent while the lowest yielding below the top 20 yields at 2.67 percent. Check out the attached list.


Below is a current stock list of dividend stocks (common shares, preferred shares and American Depositary Receipts – ADR’s), paying forthcoming dividends and having their ex-dividend within the week September 14, 2015 – September 20, 2015. The average dividend-yield amounts to 5.05 percent.


Highlights in the week are Las Vegas Sands, STMicroelectronics, Vector Group, Medical Properties, Western Union, Omnicon and Albemarle.



20 Highest Yielding Ex-Dividend Stocks
Of The Next Week (click to enlarge)

The Best Technology Dividend Growth Picks Now!

As dividend growth investor, you have a large field to decide where to put your money.

Recently, I’ve introduced a few dividend growth picks from the consumer goods sector with the highest dividend yields. 

Today I would like to continue with stocks from the technology sector.

The tech sector was no good field in the past to search for long-term dividend growers. Only old techs like IBM, Oracle, or Microsoft have paid dividends for a decade and grown them over the same period.

The reason was also simple. Technology offers the opportunity to benefit from game changers, companies that develop a new system that became a new standard.

However, today, there are 17 higher capitalized stocks with a consecutive dividend growth history of more than 10 years. Attached, you can find a full list of the results.


These are the top picks in detail...


20 Cheapest Dividend Achievers With The Highest Expected Earnings Growth

Price and growth are very essential on the stock market. The higher the growth of a corporate, the higher the price multiple can be paid.

Well, that’s the optimal theory about corporate finance. The truth is that there are often mispriced stocks in terms of growth. If the market knows more is another question.

You can find attached a list of 20 stocks with double-digit earnings growth forecasts for the next five years with low forward P/E’s of less than 15. 

I’ve only discovered stocks from the Dividend Achievers list. Those companies have raised dividends over a period of 10 consecutive years.

The yield figures of the results starts at 0.23% and ends at 10.80%.

These are the 5 best yielding results in detail....

20 Best Yielding Defensive Consumer Dividend Stocks For Long-Term Investors

Consumer Staples are widely appealed to by income investors because they are represented by some of the great blue chip stocks in the market. Companies like Altria, Coca-Cola, Colgate-Palmolive and Procter & Gamble have been paying reliable and growing dividends for the last 40+ years.

These types of companies tend to have high-quality balance sheets and are more resistant to downturns as they produce everyday products that are needed by people regardless of economic conditions. The perception of staples being a safe haven leads to many companies in the sector trading at rich valuations, which can make it difficult to find attractive entry points for new investors. In comparison with the previous sectors that have been highlighted, the consumer staples still have relatively few companies trading below fair value.

Today I would like to introduce some of the best dividend growth stocks from the defensive consumer goods sector.

Attached is a list of the 20 best yielding stocks from the consumer goods sector with a market cap over 2 billion and a dividend growth history of more than 10 consecutive years.

Check out these 10 names...

These 20 Stocks Become Most Attractive After The Latest Sell-Off

When panic drives the market, long-term orientated investors could find real bargains. A sell-off is painful but you can use the situation by acquiring attractive dividend growth stocks with a high initial yield. That's what I've done in 2008. 

I've read an interesting article on barrons.com about 20 stocks with big dividend yields. The article discussed stocks that became attractive due to the latest sell-off on the market.

What do you think about the results? Are there really bargains on the list or should we expect an ongoing sell-off?

These are some of the top results....