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My latest crack at a "Retirement Portfolio"

Showing posts with label income investing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label income investing. Show all posts

Saturday, September 30, 2023

Retirement Income Portfolio at end of September

Three months ago, at the end of June, I posted a quickly assembled million dollar retirement portfolio with the goal of realizing an income of $40,000 annually at the outset. 

It was quite a success in its first few weeks but lately it has been losing money at a very fast rate. It is ending the month of Sept. down $32,244.54.

Am I panicked? No. The market is volatile. There are no surprises here. Heck, in a correcting market one would expect to see a loss of $100,000 or more. And if a bear market were to appear, a loss of double that would be reasonable: $200,000.

As I have no reason to sell, the losses are all on paper. On the other hand, the dividend income is real and on October first I will be withdrawing $3,333.33 just as a retired senior would. This will leave more than $2300 towards the November payment.

You might not agree but in my estimation this portfolio is a success. To see the complete portfolio, click this LINK.

Tuesday, September 5, 2023

A Retirement Portfolio Designed for Dividends

How hard can it be to design a good stock portfolio capable of pumping out four percent in dividend income annually? Back in late June, June 25th to be exact, I did jut that. I designed what I hoped would be a portfolio up to the task and I posted it for all to see. Now, to sit back and see it praised or criticized depending on its performance.

I started my portfolio with an initial one million dollars. From personal experience, I believe this is a reasonable starting value. I will do more work on this in the coming months. If I have to lower the initial value of my example portfolio, I will.

I am withdrawing four percent in the first year: $40,000 annually or $3,333.33 at the start of every month. I made my first withdrawal in August. I let the first month, July, slip by as I wanted to build up a little cash before entering the withdraw stage. I filled the portfolio in June, I did not try to time the market, and so dividends began accumulating immediately.

Today, September 5, 2023, the retirement income portfolio is worth $1,008,083.36 after the withdrawal of $6,666.66 in two months (August and September). At this rate, at the end of 12 months, I will have withdrawn a full four percent in cash and the portfolio will have enjoyed a capital gain of 4.85%. Nice. Will this really come to pass. We will see.

To see the portfolio in its entirety, please click:

My latest crack at a "Retirement Portfolio"

Friday, July 21, 2023

What me worry?

According to Wikipedia Alfred E. Neuman, of Mad Magazine fame, first appeared in late 19th-century advertisements for painless dentistry – the origin of his "What, me worry?" motto. Today an investor could do worse than take Neuman's worry-free attitude to heart. 

When stock prices fall and investing looks bleak, that is often the time to buy. Telus was well down from its high of the past year and all the telecoms as a group were out of favour with investors; I saw an opportunity and bought.

Almost immediately bad news concerning Telus made big news. Telus took an immediate hit. Within a day or two, the Telus stock price had stabilized and was showing signs of recovery. It was time to buy more.

Today my Telus holdings are in the plus column and my dividend income is up in a four digit amount.

Saturday, January 7, 2023

Building a retirement portfolio is easy

When I retired I put my savings into the stock market. I discovered putting together a retirement portfolio in neither difficult nor all that risky. This is a classic buy and hold portfolio that rides out bear markets with grace.

The first stocks I purchased were bank stocks. The Royal is Canada's largest bank. Today it is paying  dividend of $5.28 for a yield of 4%. TD and the Bank of Montreal are two other must-haves when it comes to Canadian banks. TD pays a dividend of $3.84 for a dividend yield of 4.4%. BMO is paying $5.72 for a yield of 4.5%.

  • BMO - 4.5% dividend yield
  • CM - 6% dividend yield
  • RY - 4% dividend yield
  • TD - 4.4% dividend yield

One Canadian bank down on its luck is CIBC. Its depressed share price translates into a 6% dividend yield from a dividend of $3.40. Hold these four banks and you have checked off the financial holdings in your portfolio. Note: These Canadian banks are famous for not cutting their dividends. Invest $60,000 divided equally among these four bank stocks and you can count on about $2835 annually in dividend income.

Next, I would turn to the utilities sector and put about 15% of my retirement savings in a mix of Emera, Fortis, Hydro and possibly a little in Alta Gas. I think of Alta Gas as more of a utility than a pipeline.

  • Emera - 5.3% dividend yield
  • Fortis - 4.1% dividend yield
  • Hydro - 3% dividend yield
  • Alta Gas - 6% dividend yield

Put $30,000 into these four utility stocks, 4% in all but Hydro, which get 3%, and you can count on about $1410 annually in dividend income.

Pipelines are another solid investment paying fine dividends. All retirees have money invested in pipelines even if they do not know it. The Canadian Pension Fund, CPP, has a large exposure to pipelines. Buy Enbridge (ENB), TC Energy (TRP) and Pembina (PPL) and you have three good, solid companies. Note the generous dividends. There is a good reason the CPP likes pipelines: the dividends.

  • Enbridge - 6.5% dividend yield
  • Pembina - 5.7% dividend yield
  • TC Energy - 6.6% dividend yield

Put $30,000 divided equally among these three pipeline stocks and you can count on about $1880 annually in dividend income.

This brings us to telecoms. One simply must have exposure to this segment of the market and there are lots of good companies in which to park some retirement money. Think Bell, Cogeco, Quebecor and Telus. 

  • Bell - 6% dividend yield
  • Cogeco - 4.4% dividend yield
  • Quebecor - 3.8% dividend yield
  • Telus - 5.2% dividend yield

Divide $40,000 equally among these four telecom stocks and you can count on about $1940 annually in dividend income.

With only a $160,000 invested, our retirement income portfolio is already generating more than $8000 a year. It is a rare retired couple who have not saved at least $160,000 toward their retirement. The present portfolio contains fifteen different companies. This is approaching what many claim is the ideal number of investments for a small portfolio. 

If our retirees have a bit more to invest, it is time to consider putting a little into the American market. It is, after all, the biggest game in the world. A couple of American-based ETFs does not seem unreasonable. I'd put $40,000 into the States with 66% in ZWA, the BMO Covered Call Dow Jones Industrial Average Hedged to Cdn. Funds ETF, and 34% in XUS, the iShares Core S&P 500 Index ETF. (The ZWA is here for the dividend. Seniors need income. If you do not need the income, put more into XUS.)

  • XUS - 1.4% dividend yield 
  • ZWA - 6% dividend yield

Invest $40,000 divided as detailed in these two ETFs and it should generate about $1775.

Not having anything invested outside North America would be seen by some as a basic error in building a properly diversified portfolio. I am not one of these folk but if you are I would think of adding an ETF like VIDY to the mix. A Vanguard ETF, VIDY has a very low MER and pays a nice dividend of 4.35%.

If I had $25,000 I'd add some VIDY and increase my income by $1085 annually.

  • VIDY - 4.35% dividend yield

At this point, I just might call it quits. I could add some health care but the stuff I would buy does not deliver the dividend income I need in retirement. And what do I like in health care? Think TDOC and XHC.

Every portfolio I have ever had contained something that was there just for fun, to provide some excitement. I wouldn't add a lot of the following but I would be comfortable putting $25,000 in my portfolio split evenly between BN, Brookfield Corporation, and BAM, Brookfield Asset Management.

  • BAM - 3% (estimated) dividend yield
  • BN - 1.4% dividend yield

Brookfield is a fine holding in any portfolio. BAM, a recent spin-off, promises to pay a good, if not great, dividend. BN has a posted dividend yield of 1.4%. My hope is that the Brookfield investment will deliver excellent capital gains along with a fair dividend to pay one for holding the stocks.

There, we are done. A quarter of a million invested and an income of approximately $11,400. That's close to a thousand dollars a month. This portfolio delivers the almost mythical four percent without breaking a sweat. 

If one does not already have a TFSA, tax free savings account, I'd get one. Putting as much of this investment as possible into a TFSA makes a lot of sense. Avoiding some taxes makes a dividend income in retirement go farther.