How Do You Project Dividend Income?

 | Jan 11, 2023 04:44AM ET

Retirement is simple (we stop working). But it’s not necessarily easy (build up a passive income stream that replaces our previous wages).

Retiring on dividends is my jam. Payouts that arrive every quarter—or better yet, every month—are about as passive as it gets. “Mailbox” money.

Which is ideal. We’re not trying to work here, people! We’re crafting an income stream so that we needn’t answer to anyone else.

When our payouts—plus social security and any pension payments (remember those?)—surpass our expenses, we’re there. See ya, Corporate America!

And remember, we employ a “No Withdrawal” Portfolio. We live on dividends alone, which helps us keep our capital intact. Safe from a bear market.

Vanilla investors drive themselves nuts trying to figure out how much money they can safely withdraw each year. Is it 4%? No, it is actually zero.

Just ask the creator of the “4% rule,” William Bengen. An MIT grad and all-around smart guy, poor Billy is watching his nest egg crack under his own strategy. Nine years into retirement, the poor guy concedes he’s “not comfortable”—and even violating his own rule!

We trust our mantra more. Withdraw nothing, live on dividends. We can accomplish this when we look past common stocks and consider respectable payers like Gabelli Dividend & Income Trust (GDV). As I write, GDV yields 6.3% handed out monthly at the tune of $0.11 per share.

Let’s say we’re trying to retire early on $500K. It’s a stretch, but doable. Our nest egg would net us 23,685 shares in GDV. Which brings us $2,605.40 in monthly income.

GDV typically pays us by the 24th of each month. In fact, here are the fund’s next three payment dates:

  • January 24, 2023
  • February 21, 2023
  • March 24, 2023.

Clockwork monthly payouts. Nice.

Let’s say we have a million bucks saved. Great, our once-a-month income would double to $5,210.80.

Now we don’t really want to plow our entire retirement portfolio into GDV. We actually don’t want to buy it at all until the Federal Reserve pivots and loosens its anti-inflationary policy. GDV owns common stocks and as such, it is a creature of liquidity, which higher interest rates reduce.

We owned GDV in our Contrarian Income Report portfolio from October 2020 to February 2022. The fund rewarded us with 44% total returns (“total” means including dividends) but it’s down 12% (even with payouts) since we sold it.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

(Let that be a lesson to all tickers that we kick to the curb. Life without our contrarian coverage is lonely and unprofitable!)

Sure, GDV’s $0.11 per share dividend has continued to show up by the 24th of each month. But that’s not really the point if the price of the fund is falling. Which is why we moved on.

With a true No Withdrawal Portfolio we are looking for relative price stability or, even better, modest appreciation.

And of course, we wouldn’t plow into just one position. Our CIR portfolio has 14 holdings paying 7.6% combined. They span safe bonds, cash cow companies and energy stocks. This is how we retire on dividends without having to withdraw capital!