DON’T BE FOOLED BY FAKE DIVIDENDS
By Al Thomas
The latest Wall Street investment advice
is to buy a stock that pays a good dividend and
reinvest it. Your money will compound. Another
Wall Street lie.
If you have owned any stocks over the years
you have received dividends - I hope. You also
know that you have to pay tax on those
dividends as the IRS considers them ordinary
income. That does not seem right.
Let’s say you have been an owner of Microsoft
stock for a long time. Recently they declared a
$3.00 dividend on a $30 stock. WOW! That is
great – 10% on your money. You are very happy.
Joe, your next door neighbor, heard they
were going to pay a big dividend so Joe called his
very smart (?) broker who confirmed it and he
had the broker enter an order to buy a big
block of the stock the week before the dividend
was declared. Joe also received the same $3.00,
10% “dividend”.
Wait a New York minute. You waited a year
to get that dividend and Joe rang the cash
register in one week. That’s not right! Yes,
and that wasn’t a true dividend. Don’t ask me
why it is called a dividend because it isn’t.
It is a capital distribution.
That $3.00 was a distribution of your own
money back to you and to make it even worse you
had to pay tax on it. Joe outsmarted himself
and had to pay taxes when he should have stayed
home in bed. The day before the Microsoft
dividend the stock was $30. The day after the
“dividend” the stock was $27. You got back your
own money. YUK!
If you had bought a bond the day before
the bond issued a dividend the cost of the bond
price would have already reflected the dividend
amount because the bond price would have been
discounted. This is easily seen in the American
Target 2020 Zero Coupon bond whose price
reflects daily the cost of the bond that the
purchaser pays. In other words, there ain’t no
free lunch.
If you want dividends then buy U.S.Treasury
bonds or bank CDs, certificates of deposit. Do
what is called laddering. Buy different
maturity dates: 3-months, 6-months, one,
two-year notes. You can get almost any dates
you want. This will give you an incremental
flow of cash in smaller amounts.
These will be considered income which is
taxable. Many municipal bonds are not taxable,
but be very careful of these. Be sure they are
Class A insured. Corporate bonds do pay more,
but remember that as yield rises so does risk.
Again AAA insured.
You want a return on your money, but more
important, you want the return of your money.
Al Thomas' book, "If It Doesn't Go Up, Don't
Buy It!" has helped thousands of people make
money and keep their profits with his simple
2-step method. Read the first chapter at
http://www.mutualfundmagic.com and discover why
he's the man that Wall Street does not want you
to know. Copyright 2006 All rights reserved.
Copyright 2006 Albert W. Thomas All rights reserved. Author of "IF IT DOESN'T GO UP, DON'T BUY IT!"
Comments to info@mutualfundmagic.com