How To DRIP Your Way To 11.8% Dividends, 84% Profits

 | Mar 29, 2022 05:22AM ET

If this mess of a market has taught us anything (and it’s fair to say it’s taught us many things!), it’s the value of dividend reinvestment plans (DRIPs).

DRIPs are always a popular topic here at Contrarian Outlook—they’re a smart "set it and forget it" way for us to plow the payouts we don’t need back into our favorite dividend-paying stocks.

h2 Markets Crackups Make DRIPs Profitable/h2

At their core, DRIPs essentially take dollar-cost averaging (which you likely used to build your portfolio) and apply it to our dividends. By reinvesting a fixed amount of dividend cash at specific times (i.e., when your quarterly or monthly payouts roll in), you’ll naturally buy more stocks when they’re cheap and fewer when they’re pricey.

And with the S&P 500 falling 12.4% from the start of the year to its trough, before the recent bounce-back cut that loss in half, investors who’ve "timed" their buys through DRIPs over the first quarter have gotten some sweet deals indeed.

h2 My Take? Use DRIPs—Then Go One Step Further/h2

You can boost your DRIP gains (and income) further when you add to your regular DRIP buys by setting aside some dividend cash for a special moment. You can either reinvest this cash in the same stocks or target new dividend opportunities.

I call this my "DRIP+" strategy, and every month in my Contrarian Income Report service, I give you a table of my top picks from our portfolio for you to put this cash (or any new money, for that matter) to work.

In our July 2020 issue, for example, we rolled out seven picks in our monthly best-buy table. Among them was pipeline operator ONEOK (NYSE:OKE), which was throwing off an outsized 11.8% yield at the time.

Let’s say a hypothetical CIR member we’ll call Cathy had some dividend cash she’d squirreled away from our other portfolio holdings and used it to take a position in ONEOK back then. By now, Cathy has banked $6.54 a share in dividends on a stock she bought for around $45. That’s nearly 15% of her original investment already recouped through dividends—not bad!

And while her dividends rolled in (red arrows on the chart below), she’d have enjoyed strong price gains, with ONEOK shares up 58% since then on price alone. Add reinvested dividends and Cathy’s total return jumps to 84%.

Now let’s take it one step further and say Cathy invested $1,000 of her OKE dividends back into the company through a DRIP. This is where the real magic happens, because thanks to her DRIP, she never has to worry about overpaying. She can thank OKE’s restless share price for that:

h3 ONEOK’s Price Swings Make It A Savvy DRIP Play/h3
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