Extra Dividend Income Hidden In Plain Sight

 | Apr 02, 2021 05:10AM ET

It is challenging to find stocks that pay enough money to retire on. For example, even a 3.3% dividend—generous by today’s standards—isn’t enough to turn a $1,000,000 into an income stream that will last forever.

I’ll save you the math. It’s just $33,000 per year on a million dollars.

Fortunately, this same dividend yield is understated on most mainstream financial websites. In reality, this stock paid 7.7% over the past twelve months. Which means its millionaire investors actually earned $77,000 in dividend income.

Yes, you read that right. There was an extra $44,000 hidden in plain sight thanks to a “special” dividend payment.

h2 Three Kinds of Special Dividends/h2

Most investors are familiar with “regular dividends,” which are simply recurring cash payouts doled out regularly—once or twice a year, typically quarterly, or when we’re lucky, monthly.

A special dividend, by comparison, is a one-time, typically non-recurring payout. Sometimes companies pay these in addition to their regular dividends. Sometimes, companies with no regular dividend will nonetheless throw out a special payment.

Why? There are three reasons.

h2 Special Dividend #1: We Had a Great Quarter (or Year)!/h2

Every now and then, a company will report out-of-this-world profits, and they decide to share the excess wealth with shareholders.

Such was the case with Rocket Companies (NYSE:RKT), which in late February announced a $1.11 per share special dividend (a 5.6% annual yield on its price at the time).

It did so after a blowout Q4 report, earning $1.14 per share against estimates of 87 cents. Those profits were 350% higher year-over-year, and came on the back of a 144% jump in revenues that also easily beat expectations.

OK. You and I see Street-smashing reports all the time, and rarely does a company announce a big one-time payout. Sometimes other motives can be at play—in Rocket’s case, it was facing extremely high short interest at the time. What better way to shake a few of those shorts loose than to throw cash at shareholders?

h2 Of Course, It Didn’t Last Forever