Max Dividends portfolio: month 4 - week 4. Goal $12,000 monthly for 120 months
Monthly Dividends $193.80 | Yield on cost 4.78% | Stocks purchased today π
Hi there, this is Max Dividends!
Each investor dreams of living on passive income by receiving dividends from shares. The same goes with me. Today, Iβve made new additions to my dividend portfolio. See all updates inside!
My regular purchases done this week. And happily I catched Pepsi in undervalued zone, so now is time Pepsi! 3 shares came into my dividend portfolio.
Month 4. Week 4 - Companies purchased today
Today's investment: ~$2,959.80
Total invested: ~$48,593.34
Portfolio yield on cost: ~4.78% | Dividends now: ~$2,325.66
π link to My MaxDividends strategy Portfolio
6,64% (VZ) Verizon Communications Inc 14 shares
3,38% (CSCO) Cisco Systems Inc 12 shares
3,47% (GEF) Greif Inc 10 shares
3,56% (GIS) General Mills 9 shares
4,55% (BBY) Best Buy Co 7 shares
Today's investment: ~$2,959.80 | Total: ~$48,593.34
Yearly dividends now: ~$2,325.66 (+$125.39 since last week)
Portfolio yield on cost: ~4.78%
Month 4. Week 4 vs Month 4. Week 3
MaxDividends Worldwide Portfolio
Last week, I ran a poll asking if youβd be interested in seeing my global dividend portfolio. Got a ton of βYESβ responses.
So, let me give you a quick rundown first. The core idea stays the sameβbuild a high-yield, dividend-growing portfolio thatβs also got solid potential for sustainable price performance.
Using BeatMarketβs analysis and the main MaxDividends concept, my team and I are scanning global markets, hunting down the best opportunities across developed countries.
Weβve dubbed this strategy MaxDividends Advanced. Why?
Well, youβll need a brokerage account with access to global stocks. All these companies are available through Interactive Brokers.
Itβs a multicurrency portfolio, mostly in EUR, USD, AUD, CAD, JPY, DKK, PLN, GBP, and a few others.
Weβre looking at about a ~7% dividend yield, with an average annual dividend growth of +9% over the last decade.
And on top of that, weβre expecting around ~4-5% price returns in the long run, alongside those dividends.
Here are some snapshots of my current MaxDividends Advanced portfolio.
My High Yield Dividend Growth story. $12,000 monthly for 120 months
I am an entrepreneur, dad to three, and a private investor in stocks. Pick up high-yield dividend growth stocks to live off dividends and retire early.
I'm author of MaxDividends Strategy for building long-term growing dividend income and also the CEO and founder of beatmarket.com.
No one wants to work forever, and the question of financial security becomes more pressing. Can we really count on enjoying life after retiring, without having to find another job just to make ends meet?
π To focus on what we love, we need stop worrying about daily expenses. For me, the solution was creating a growing passive income stream through dividend stocks.
Early retirement?
The idea of growing passive income typically dawns on us when we realize weβre no longer in our twenties. For me, this realization hit around age 35. I donβt plan to run a business my entire lifeβI have big plans for other areas of my life too. I enjoy writing, blogging, and sharing my experiences. Retire early before 50 is the main mission for me now.
Ten years ago, I started investing in growth stocks. By now, the capital from those investments and my past savings have allowed me to start implementing my planned strategy. In the early years, I focused primarily on growth stocks, but over the past few years and especially in recent months, Iβve shifted more towards high-yield, dividend growing stocks.
At this stage in my life, predictable growing passive income is more important than the long-term price appreciation of stocks, because I plan to live off the dividends.
MaxDividends strategy in practice
To see how the MaxDividends strategy works in practice, I started an experiment: $12,000 a month in 120 months.
Using the MaxDividends calculator, I calculated that by investing $12,000 a month with a starting capital of $ 0.00 π³ and reinvesting dividends, I will reach my goal in ~120 months. Until the end of the experiment, I will reinvest all received dividends back.
π΄ Year 1: ~10% of the Goal
π΄ Year 5: ~45% of the Goal
π Year 10: 100% of the Goal. Mission complete!
Every week, I make purchases according to this plan and post the strategy results on the blog. You can follow my purchases here.
You can check also topics about RoadMap to live off dividends
Turn on the Max Dividends. Start building your growing passive income with dividends from stocks.
Learn more about MaxDividends Strategy
Applying the Strategy to Your Goals
Learn more about
FAQ
π What is MaxDividends project idea?
π What is MaxDividends strategy?
π How do you choose MaxDividends stocks?
π How well does the MaxDividends strategy work for building a growing passive income?
π One more secret sauce of MaxDividends strategy
π MaxDividends Roadmap to Early Retirement with Living Off Dividends
π A few important notes:
We're not Wall Street managers or a fund, and our fee for using the product will be the lowest in the world. We're a startup and a group of individual investors who, like you, want to live off dividends.
Profit isn't the project's main goal. Once we cover the costs of maintenance and development, we'll direct most of our earnings to charity and funds for research and fighting complex diseases.
Did you enjoy the MaxDividends idea and research by finding it interesting, saving you time & getting valuable insights? What would be appreciated?
Sharing it around with like-minded people and hitting the β€οΈ button. This will help me bringing in more & more independent investment research about passive income based on investing in solid high yield dividend growth stocks: from a small startup team of private investors, followers of DGI and F.I.R.E with dividend income, not a fund, bank or so β¦ !
Support us and welcome aboard! Launch your own dividend machine following Max Dividends strategy.
Hi Max Dividends, I like the work you do, it's very interesting. I have a question, what program do you use for the graphs in this article? I'm referring to dividend yield, dividend growth, etc. Greetings and good work.