My Top Dividend Strategy Delivered A 161% Return ; Here’s How It Works

 | Apr 12, 2022 05:18AM ET

Beware of Wall Street “wisdom” now more than ever. Especially when it comes to the most commonly quoted maxim for retirement: it’s based on a rule that was never designed for times like these!

I’m talking about the so-called “4% rule,” which says you should sell 4% of your nest egg every year in retirement.

Sounds simple, right?

Trouble is, it slashes your income stream and caps your upside in one go! It’s especially dangerous advice to follow in a downturn like the one that’s hit us in the last few months.

Let’s say, for example, you own $200,000 worth of Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:CSCO) shares. The company is one of the most reliable dividend payers in the tech space, hiking its payout for years and continuously growing it (though not spectacularly: Cisco’s annual hikes usually only come in at just one or two cents a share).

Your holding would pay $1.52 per share in dividends on an annualized basis, for a 2.8% yield, based on today’s share price. Let’s also say you were slated to sell 4% of your holding—or $8,000 worth—on Dec. 29, 2021, just before year end, when the stock hit an all-time high of $63.53. To get your $8K back then, you’d have had to sell 126 shares.

With 126 shares gone from your account, your yearly dividend income drops by $192. Plus, you’ve got 126 fewer shares to appreciate in the future. It’s the worst of both worlds!

That’s bad enough, but it gets worse when these sells fall in the depths of a pullback. Imagine what would happen if you had to sell on Apr. 5, 2022, just a few days ago:

h2 The Worst Kind Of Market Timing/h2