What's your opinion on this? Specifically for a taxable brokerage account, long term hold and don't need the money/plan on touching it for another 10-15 years.
I bleed maroon said:
I started out in the 90s as a big proponent of Dividend Reinvestment overall. I participated in a number of company-sponsored DRIP programs, and reinvested in my brokerage account wherever it was allowed. My purpose was dual - save on commissions, and have a routine disciplined approach to investing which benefitted from compounding.
Then, brokerage commissions dropped from $100 to $40 to $0 per trade in less than a decade, and it made the expense-savings part of it moot to me. The discipline part was never that big a deal for me, as I always considered those earnings "earmarked" for investments, and had my eye on something else to invest in vs. spend it on a new boat or somesuch.
So today, my strategy is to reinvest only for mutual funds (all very long-term holds - I prefer ETFs now, mainly due to option trading and tax flexibility), and use the cash dividends to fund future purchases.
The only warning is that you need to pay periodic attention to your asset allocation, as dividend reinvestment naturally probably keeps you relatively close to your initial targets, while reinvesting cash in new things can get you out of whack much more quickly.
billikenag said:
Yes--dividends should be reinvested in similar/different securities as long as the money is not needed for living expenses. That's the basis of compounding/compound interest.
As to how exactly to go about reinvesting dividends... Are you indexing or valuing and buying individual positions?
If you are indexing, just reinvest the dividends automatically as another form of dollar cost averaging.
If you value and buy individual securities, I recommend letting the dividends pool in the account and using them to purchase more of the securities you already hold or initiate new positions based on your own calculations of price to intrinsic value (which is the very essence of valuing and buying an individual security and purchasing when security price represents a discount to security intrinsic value).
If I understand your question correctly ...txag614 said:
Extremely newb question. I know that if I buy a fund (looking at VOO and/or SCHD) before or after the ex-div date I will not receive the next dividend payout. My question is, will I receive the dividend payout at all, or do I have the wait for the ex-dividend date to be announced?
I would rather throw a little $ monthly to invest rather than quarterly to start off but did not want to invest before or after the ex-dividend date if I will never receive the dividend.