What’s Wrong with Depending on Dividend Stocks? Part 2: Dividend Stocks vs. Total Return Investing
In Part 1 of “What’s Wrong with Depending on Dividend Stocks?” we described why dividend investing—or, stocking up on stocks with a reputation for consistently paying out attractive dividends—may not be an ideal strategy for generating a dependable income stream out of your investment portfolio.
Today, we’ll look at why we prefer a total return investment strategy instead of seeking more concentrated dividend stock positions, even for retirees who are drawing income out of their portfolios.
Relative Worth
Admittedly, there are more dubious ventures than concentrating on dividend stocks. Take, for example, piling your life’s savings into speculative schemes such as cryptocurrency, SPACs, or Jim Cramer’s latest “Mad Money” picks. (Here’s John Oliver’s clip on that, for a laugh.)
But rather than settling on dividend investing, here are two questions for homing in on a better way to build and spend your lifetime wealth:
1. Investing: As you invest and accumulate wealth over time, how can you pursue the highest total return over time, given the level of market risk you can tolerate?
2. Divesting: As you take income out of your portfolio, how can you best maintain its risk-managed structure, while generating the most tax-efficient withdrawals over time?
Where dividend investing falls short on these pivotal counts, total return investing is better structured for directly addressing them, head on.
How Does Total Return Investing Work?
Bottom line, there are essentially three ways any given investment can reward investors:
1. Interest/Dividends: A security can pay out more or less interest or dividends.
2. Capital Appreciation: A security can offer higher or lower capital gains or losses (based on how much you pay per share versus how much your shares are worth when you sell them).
3. Cost Control: As you buy and sell your holdings, you can incur more or fewer taxes and other costs that eat into your returns.
Instead of seeking to isolate and maximize dividends as a single solution, total-return investing seeks to make an appropriate use of all three of these potential money-making tools as they apply to you, your investment opportunities, and your personal financial goals.
Total return investing potentially offers more flexibility for pursuing overall expected returns within your risk parameters—regardless of where those expected returns come from.
Also, dividend investing can limit you to investing in no more than about 40% of all publicly traded stocks. With total return investing, we can consider the entire universe of available stocks.
As we’ll see next, evidence suggests this is an important differentiator.
Evidence-Based Underpinnings
Total return investing is grounded in decades of academic evidence identifying the stock market’s true sources of expected returns. These include investing in stocks versus bonds to begin with, as well as incorporating return factors such as company size, book value, and profitability.
The research is clear: Whether or not a company pays out dividends is NOT among these identified return factors. We’ve known this since at least the 1960s, when Nobel laureates Merton Miller and Franco Modigliani published their landmark study, “Dividend Policy, Growth, and the Valuation of Shares.” They found, if you omit external factors such as trading costs and taxes, investors should be indifferent to whether companies distribute shareholders’ profits as capital gains or dividends.
In a recent VettaFi Advisor Perspectives piece, Larry Swedroe, director of research for Buckingham Strategic Wealth revisited this conclusion with his own analysis of four popular dividend-appreciation ETFs. He looked at whether they outperformed their counterparts after accounting for the types of investment factors that drive expected returns. Swedroe concludes:
“Be skeptical of strategies that conflict with economic theory. Even without considering the negative tax implications of a dividend-paying stock … investors are better served by directly targeting factor exposures in their portfolio rather than using a dividend screen, which reduces the investable universe significantly.”
The Benefits of Total Return Investing
As total return investors, we can still draw from and make best use of available dividends and interest. Because, on a purely rational level, a dollar is a dollar and a return is a return, no matter how it’s paid out.
But whenever it may make more sense to do so, we can also sell positions to generate income. We can also prioritize managing an investment portfolio and income withdrawals as cost- and tax-efficiently as possible, without having to maintain a dividend-stock exposure.
By building from this position of strength, you can pursue the outcomes that make the most sense for you. Would you like to have more income to spend in the end? Possibly experience less market volatility along the way? Work toward creating a balance between growth and stability? Total return investing gives you many ways to mix and match the pieces of your portfolio accordingly. In fact, most total return portfolios still include dividend stocks; they’re just no longer a central pursuit.
By concentrating on dividend stocks, investors are inadvertently investing in a byproduct of the market’s actual sources for expected returns. Why not invest directly in these sources themselves? By focusing on your portfolio’s total return as the horse that drives your proverbial cart, we believe we can appropriately manage expected returns, and appropriately position your portfolio to generate efficient cash flow when the time comes.
If you’d like to know more, please be in touch.
The opinions voiced in this material are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. All performance referenced is historical and is no guarantee of future results.
Dividend payments are not guaranteed and may be reduced or eliminated at any time by the company.
There is no guarantee that a diversified portfolio will enhance overall returns or outperform a non-diversified portfolio. Diversification does not protect against market risk.
Stock investing includes risks, including fluctuating prices and loss of principal.
Past performance is no guarantee of future results. There can be no guarantee that strategies promoted will be successful or protect against loss.