Automatic Data Processing: A Dividend Champion For The Dividend Yield

 | Mar 04, 2013 04:49AM ET

And the buying process goes on. Last Friday I bought 25 shares of the business services stock Automatic Data Processing (ADP). The purchase is the first one with a yield of less than 3%. As you might see, high quality stocks are becoming rare, especially when you look for high yielding growth picks with cheap fundamentals.

What Automatic Data Processing Makes

ADP provide business outsourcing solutions. The company operates in three segments: Employer Services, Professional Employer Organization (PEO) Services, and Dealer Services. The Employer Services segment offers a range of human resource (HR) information, payroll processing, time and labor management, and tax and benefits administration solutions and services, including traditional and Web-based outsourcing solutions

How Automatic Data Processing Affects The Dividend Yield Portfolio

The total purchase amount was $1,546.25 and will give me roughly $40 in additional annual dividends for my Dividend Yield Passive Income Portfolio (DYPI). The full income, estimated on a twelve-trailing months basis, amounts to $1,176.17.

The income results from 22 stock holdings, each worth around $1,000 – $2,000. The total purchase amount was $31,514.50. Now they have a market value of $33,298.70. The remaining cash of $68,656 is still available for white elephants.

I plan to hunt for real bargains, which are very rare for the time being. I also believe that I don’t have big bargains in the DYPI-Portfolio because of the market situation. We are in a time of monetary easing. As a result, financial assets like stocks, gold or even bonds have a solid to fair valuation. Maybe they are overvalued if we include all the downside risks from this dangerous quantitative federal policy. I cannot tell you how it will end but it should definitely have a consequence for the currency.

The DYPI-Portfolio was funded virtual with $100k on October 03, 2012 and made a return of 1.63% since the date of funding. The performance is so low compared to the market because of the huge cash amount and the slow purchase process (I invest each week only 1-2% of the cash). Roughly 68% of the fund is not invested.

I never thought that this strategy of buying a stock each week for 1-2% of its portfolio worth will lose performance if the market goes strong up but my thoughts with this asset vehicle are different.