Hidden Yield Stocks Worth A Look

 | Nov 25, 2020 04:19AM ET

Our beat here at Contrarian Outlook is dividends. We seek to collect them using proven income strategies.

Dividend stock investing isn’t easy, even though it looks so on the surface. (Find a high yield, and buy it!) We’ve all had our heart broken by one or more “disappearing” dividend payers in the past. These delinquents are the reason we place such a premium on dividend security.

One secure-looking strategy is (unfortunately) known as dividend capture. I don’t like the name because it sounds like something we should be interested in. I don’t like the approach itself because it doesn’t really work.

The theory seems innocent enough:

  1. Find a stock that is about to pay a dividend,
  2. Buy it before it’s “ex-dividend date,”
  3. Pocket the payout, and
  4. Sell the shares after.

Let’s take Verizon (NYSE:VZ), which is a stock that investors buy primarily for its 4.1% dividend. Its most recent ex-dividend date was Oct. 8. (This means that anyone who held VZ shares when the market opened this day would receive its $0.627 quarterly payout.)

Knowing that stocks tend to appreciate in anticipation of their ex-date, we could have attempted to “capture” the dividend by purchasing VZ on Oct. 1 and holding the stock until mid-month.

The S&P 500 happened to appreciate 3.1% during these 15 days, so we’d expect to have pocketed the payout with a bit of price appreciation to boot. Unfortunately, VZ dropped 1.1%!

h2 Captured the Dividend, Lost It (and More) in Price/h2