Maximizing a Stock Market Investment - Insurance Owl

Insurance Information - Insurance Owl

Maximizing a Stock Market Investment

Maximizing a stock market investmentThere are several factors an investor in the stock market should
consider for a maximum return on an investment:
1. All stock purchases should be commission-free.
2. All stocks purchased should be from a company that has a
history of raising their dividends every year.
3. The company should not only have a history of raising their
dividend every year, but should also show price appreciation in
the market place, on a year to year basis.
4. All dividends from the companies should be rolled-over into
more shares of the company, until retirement. This should be done by the company, for the shareholder, commission-free.
5. The companies purchased should have staggered dividend pay-out dates so the income from 12 companies will provide the
shareholder cash dividend income every week of the year. No more
than 12 companies should be owned, otherwise, you’re probably
spreading your money too thin.
6. A systematic approach of dollar-cost averaging should be done
on a quarterly basis. A savings plan should be adopted to add to
your holdings every quarter, along with the dividend
reinvestment.
7. Stocks purchased should pay a dividend yield of at least 2.0%
or better. A low 2.0% dividend yield isn't necessarily bad
because it means the company in question is using most of their
profits too expand.
In other words, it's a growth stock with
business, profits and earnings growing. A growth stock makes up
for the lower dividend yield because their stock prices will more than likely rise faster.
8. The company should have been in business at least eight years,
showing dividend increases each year. This will eliminate the
risk involved in putting money into a risky new start up company
(the kind that is going to change the world - they are just too
hard to find).
9. The company must have a stock dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP). If the dividend paid by the company is $2.
63 for the quarter, all of that $2.
63 will purchase a further percentage of shares (partial shares) and this should be done automatically for you by the company or their Transfer Agent.
10. The companies you purchase should be purchased with the
intent of realizing ever-increasing cash dividends for you and
your family for the rest of your lives.

Everything you would need to know to start an investment program which emphasizes the considerations above is explained to you in my book The Stockopoly Plan - Investing for Retirement; published by American-Book Publishing.

Below is an excerpt from the book I would like to share with you!

Have you ever noticed how some words in the English language are
so perfectly named for what they describe? And how some words
seem to be, I guess you could say backwards? For instance, the
word sunflower!
How wonderfully aptly named is the sunflower,
that beautiful yellow flower that follows the sun from sunrise to sunset. And then there are those words in the English language where there meaning appears to be backward, so to speak - like parkway and driveway. When my car is parked at home, I would think it would be parked on, well, a parkway - and when I’m on the road driving somewhere, I would think I’d be driving on a - a driveway.

In the stock market world, I think the word analyst is a perfect
word in the English language and stockbroker sounds right to me,
too. And this leads me to what I call the ‘brainwashing mantras’
of Wall Street.

The brainwashing mantras of Wall Street may take the form of a
number, such as a stock rating of 1, 2, 3 etc. Or the mantras may be a star, 1 star, 2 stars etc. The mantras may be a word or a group of words- attractive, unattractive, neutral, market
perform, market out-perform, market under-perform, market
under-weight, market equal weight, market over-weight, sector
perform, strong buy, buy, sell, strong sell.

These mantras are so ingrained in Wall Street and investor’s
minds that they have created multi-billion dollar industries.
There are other types of mantras, such as RSI (relative strength
index - a trading volume indicator), Bollinger Bands (named after its creator John Bollinger (he use to be a regular on CNBC) and the bands deal with the channels a stock trades in, in relation to its ‘moving average’- another mantra), Stochastics (used to tell if a stock is 75 % overbought - too many people have been buying) or 25% oversold (too many people have been selling), Momentum, MACD (Moving Average Convergence/Divergence –price of the stock, up or down, in relation to its moving average), 50 day, 200 day moving averages, triple bottoms and tops, pendants, flags, bear and bull markets, head and shoulders formations, double bottoms, P/E ratios etc, etc, etc.

All these mantras serve a purpose (and if you’re inclined to
trade in the market they are, I admit, useful tools). They create commissions.

And in my opinion, have no meaning what-so-ever for the
long-term, dollar-cost averaging, buying investor of company’s
shares, free of commission charges, whose companies raise their
dividend every year, with the investor’s idea or purpose being to provide an 85% tax-free income, through ever-increasing dividends for the rest of their lives, no matter what the price of the stock at any given time in the market place may be.

For more excerpts from the book ‘The Stockopoly Plan - Investing for Retirement’ visit http://www.thestockopolyplan.comYou have permission to this article either electronically or in
print as long as the author bylines are included, with a live
link, and the article is not changed in any way (typos excluded). Please provide a courtesy e-mail to charles@thestockopolyplan.com telling where the article was published. (Word Count 988)Charles M. O’Melia is an individual investor with almost 40 years of experience and passion for the stock market. The author of the book ‘The Stockopoly Plan’; published by American-Book
Publishing.
The book can be purchased at:
http:/http://www.pdbookstore.com/comfiles/pages/CharlesMOMelia.shtml

Charles O'Melia

Make Money with No Money-When Will Opportunity Knock?

Golf Course Construction Swings Into Action on the Bulgarian Coast
Credit Card Myths and Realities
The Allure of Dividend
California and Orange County Home Equity Loans
Top 8 Life Insurance Mistakes to Avoid
Instant Loans Cash- Keeps Finance in Order Till the Next Financial Replenishment
The Ultimate Business Opportunity - Let Me Inspire You (Part 2)
Make Money with No Investment -Starting from Scratch
Adverse Credit Mortgages - Real Estate Borrowing with Discordant Credit
Make Money with No Money-When Will Opportunity Knock?

5 Surefire Ways To Eliminate Credit Card Debt

Purchasing Property With No Money Down: My Personal Experience
Alas! In E-Commerce Taxland
Home Based Business: Your Ultimate Tax Shelter
Rearrange Your Affairs For Maximum Tax Savings
The Wealth Connection – 2 Steps to Brighten Your Golden Years
The Pros and Cons of Debt Consolidation Loans
Your Guide On Choosing a Credit Card To Suit You
4 Steps You Can Take If Your Online Credit Card Application Has Been Refused
7 Surefire Ways To Repair Bad Credit
5 Surefire Ways To Eliminate Credit Card Debt

Articles by the same author

How To Create Wealth In The Stock Market
Defining a Long-Term Investment in the Stock Market
401(k) Plans
Dividend Paying Stocks
Investing in the Stock Market - When To!
The Perfect Mutual Fund
The POWER of a Proven Stock Investment Plan
Invest In The Stock Market For The RIGHT Reason, Using The RIGHT Choices
Maximizing a Stock Market Investment
A Gadfly On A Dinosaurs Butt, Or The Hood-winking Of The American Investor
10 Tips For Creating Wealth From the Stock Market
Investing in Stocks and The Game of Monopoly
Investing in the Stock Market
Stock Market Diversification
Good Stock Market Tip; Good Return!
Buy: Hold: Sell:
Jump

Stock Market Retirement Investment Plan
Investing in Dividend Paying Stocks
An Economical Retirement Investment Plan
An Old Dividend Stock Investment Idea, for a New Generation
A Personal Stock Market Investment Philosophy
Why have Investment Plans for the Stock Market
Stock Market Investments
Stock Market Volatility
A Stock Market Investment Strategy
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Stock Market

Disclaimer

Please note that this website is for information only. Whilst every care has been taken to provide accurate information the complex nature of insurance, cover and compensation mean that you are responsible for the final decision on what action should be taken.
You need to take special care to ensure that the advice given applies to you country, state or jurisdiction.

Bleach 149 . Bleach 150
Bleach fan-site with downloads and forum.

Magazine Subscription
Find the perfect magazine subscription for cheap at Mags4Cheap.Com. Save up to 93% off more than 1,500 magazine subscriptions.
marker About Us | Site Map | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | ©2005-2006