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The Most Successful Dividend Investors of all time - investbullbear

Tan KW
Publish date: Wed, 04 Mar 2015, 09:06 PM
Tan KW
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The Most Successful Dividend Investors of all time

 

Dividend investing is as sexy as watching paint dry on the wall. Defining an entry criteria that selects quality dividend stocks with rising dividends over time and then patiently reinvesting these dividends while sitting on your hands is not exciting. While active traders have a plethora of hedge fund managers on the covers of Forbes magazine there are not many well-publicized successful dividend investors. Even value investing has its own superstars – Ben Graham and Warren Buffett.

I did some research and uncovered several successful dividend investors, whose stories provide reassurance that the traits of successful dividend investing I outlined in a previous post are indeed accurate.

The first investor is Anne Scheiber, who turned a $5,000 investment in 1944 into $22 million by the time of her death at the age of 101 in 1995. Anne Scheiber worked as an IRS auditor for 23 years, never earning more than $3150/year. The one important lesson she learned auditing tax returns was that the surest way to become rich in America is by accumulating stocks. She accumulated stocks in brand name companies she understood andthen reinvested dividends for decades. She never sold, in order to avoid paying taxes and commissions. She also never sold even during the 1972-1974 bear market as well as the 1987 market crash because she had high conviction in her stocks picks. She also held a diversified portfolio of almost 100 individual securities in brand names such as Coca-Cola (KO), PepsiCo (PEP), Bristol-Myers (BMY), Schering Plough (acquired by Pfizer in 2009). She read annual reports with the same inquisitive mind she audited tax returns during her tenure at the IRS and also attended annual shareholders meetings. Anne Scheiber did her own research on stocks, and was focusing her attention on strong franchises which have the opportunity to increase earnings and pay higher dividends over time.

In her later years she reinvested her dividends into tax free municipal bonds, which is why her portfolio had a 30% allocation to fixed income at the time of her death. At the time of her death, her portfolio was throwing off $750,000 in dividend and interest income annually. She donated her whole fortune to Yeshiva University, even though she never attended it herself.

The second investor is Grace Groner, who turned a small $180 investment in 1935 into $7 million by the time of her death in 2010. Ms Groner, who worked as a secretary at Abbott Laboratories for 43 years invested $180 in 3 shares of Abbott Laboratories (ABT) in 1935. She then simply reinvested the dividends for the next 75 years. She never sold, but just held on to her shares.


She was frugal, having grown up in the depression era, and was the classical millionaire next door type of person who was not interested in keeping up with the Joneses. Grace Groner left her entire fortune to her Alma Mater. Her $7 million donation is generating approximately $250,000 in annual dividend income. 

The reason why dividend investors are not highly publicized is because dividend investing is not sexy enough to be featured in the financial mainstream media. In addition to that, it is not profitable for Wall Street to sell you into the idea that ordinary investors can invest on their own. Compare this to mutual funds, annuities and other products which generate billions in commissions for Wall Street, despite the fact that they might not be in the best interest of small investors.

The third dividend investor is Warren Buffett, the Oracle of Omaha himself. In a previous article I have outlined the reasoning behind my belief that Buffett is a closet dividend investor. He explicitly noted in his 2009 letter that "the best businesses by far for owners continue to be those that have high returns on capital and that require little incremental investment to grow". His investment in See's Candy is the best example of that.

Some of Buffett's best companies/stock that he has owned such as Geico, Coca Cola , See's Candy are exactly the types of investments mentioned above. He has mentioned that at Berkshire he tries to stick with businesses whose profit picture for decades to come seems reasonably predictable. Per Buffett the best businesses by far for owners continue to be those that have high returns on capital and that require little incremental investment to grow. In addition, his 2011 letter discussed his dividend income from all of Berkshire Hathaway investments, including his prediction that Coca Cola dividends will keep on increasing, based on the pattern of historical dividend increases.

In this article I outlined three dividend investors, who managed to turn small investments into cash machines that generated large amounts of dividends. They were able to accomplish this through identifying quality dividend growth companies at attractive valuations, patiently reinvesting distributions and in two out of three cases maintaining a diversified portfolio of stocks. These are the lessons that all investors could profit from.


 

 
 
 


http://www.dividendgrowthinvestor.com/2012/06/most-successful-dividend-investors-of.html
 

 

Discussions
2 people like this. Showing 15 of 15 comments

manhar

Very good and informative article.
Useful for low risk share investors.
Will appreciate if can quote example of such stocks that can be invested in KLSE.

2015-03-04 21:37

growthinvestor

dividend investor type is hard to find and most difficult to achieve.resist temptation to lock in profit is unthinkable for most of us.

2015-03-04 21:43

carries

Did anyone else notice that 2 out of the 3 are women?

2015-03-05 10:10

Kevin Wong

Who says there's no such thing as low risk-high returns in investing?!

2015-03-05 10:23

iiinvestsmart

Dividend investing is a strategy of investing whereby an individual engages in long-term investments with quality businesses. These companies typically have a long-term successful track record already behind them. Compounding is the astonishing multiplier effect of interest earned on dividend over time.

Dividend investor is like trying to find a needle in haystack.

2015-03-06 10:44

Kevin Wong

In Bursaa alone, there are about 50 stocks that had been paying good dividends since 1995...and even mor counters have joined in the fray over the last 10 to 19 years.

2015-03-06 14:37

manhar

Please name some of them....

2015-03-06 15:41

Kevin Wong

DiGi, Maybank, Public B, Maybank, LPI, Nestle, D Lady, Ajinomoto, Amway, Litrak, F&N, Uchitec,...and those 'sins' counters dealing in alcohol, tobacco and game of chance.

2015-03-06 16:10

chrischan

kikikikiki!!!!!iiinvestsmart you are here!!!!!!!!come to bjcorpse sing con blow water there!!!!!!!!kikikikiki!!!!!

2015-03-06 17:21

chrischan

kikikikiki!!!!!!can you invest long term and put dividend back to same stock!!!!!!!!!that the challenge!!!!!!!kikikikiki!!!!!

2015-03-06 17:25

MrWealthy4321

good article to share ..thank you

2015-03-06 19:26

Kian Leong Lim

This article has the good intention of telling people not to invest hastily but exercise patience instead. From my personal experience, I tried to be a dividend investor in Malaysia but so far I think I fail badly. It didnt' work here in Malaysia for a lot of stocks, don't know why? I would give investing in a stock for a period of maximum 5 years when you are planning on buying it. But when there is a chance to sell, I prefer to tell myself to sell instead of holding on. The market here is very fragile, one year up one year down, one month up and one month down, hard to see also? There are always scandals, rumors, economic crisis, and most stocks are beaten down badly since long time ago and haven't recover yet for the majority of them to their higher prices registered 10 years ago!

2015-03-06 20:15

benson911

Hi Kian leong Lim, in my opinion, i think it depends on stock that u invested....Stocks like Amway, Digi,KPJ, Public Bank and etc give u superb return in term of capital appreciation and dividend yield for the last 5 years at least..............

2015-03-06 20:20

Kevin Wong

Still gain a lot if the dividend stock one had invested 20 years ago, have dropped by 10% over the years...if that counter continue to payout cash generously every year. and one continue to reinvest back everytime...

2015-03-06 21:22

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