The past dividend yields' calculations are based on 15.02.18's closing price. It basically means if you bought based on 15.02.18's closing price, you would be able to get that dividend yield if you had a time machine to go back in time to collect the dividends. A better way to use the data is if the company keeps growing the dpu year after year (green cells), there's a better chance that they could continue to maintain or grow the dpu moving forward. However, always keep up to date with the company's fundamentals before investing. Do not invest solely based on dividend yield.
Without further ado, here's the dividend yield/dpu of STI 30 Component Stocks.
A lot of hard research and data entry work has been done in order to come up with this data. If you find it useful, please share this blog post link. Also check out my previous post where I compare the dpu of banks and telcos stocks: link here.Cheers!
P.S - My previous blog post on banks and telcos dividend yield did not garner as much interest as REITs dividend yield. If the interests are not there for non-REIT stocks, I will not update the data in future.
P.S - My previous blog post on banks and telcos dividend yield did not garner as much interest as REITs dividend yield. If the interests are not there for non-REIT stocks, I will not update the data in future.
P.S - My previous blog post on banks and telcos dividend yield did not garner as much interest as REITs dividend yield.
ReplyDeleteHmm ... It seen that most readers are looking for income investing blog posts.
Surprisingly, this latest post's pageviews has overtaken my previous post in a matter of hours. Probably I didn't advertise my last post properly or everyone was celebrating cny the last 2 days. But REITs' posts and posts that talk about how much dividend income I receive tend to get more views quicker.
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