10 Steps to Successful Income Investing for Beginners
1
The First Step to Putting Together
Investments That You Can Live Off Of for Life
Do you
need to build a portfolio that will generate cash? Are you more concerned with
paying your bills and having enough income than growing richer? If so, you need
to focus on something called income investing.
This long-lost practice used to be popular before the great twenty-year bull market taught everyone to believe that the only good
investment was one that you bought for ten dollars and sold for twenty.
Although income investing went out of style with the general public, the
discipline is still quietly practiced throughout the mahogany-paneled offices
of the most respected wealth management firms in the world.
In
this special feature on income investing, you're going to develop a better
understanding of income investing, which types of assets might be considered
appropriate for someone who wanted to follow an income investing philosophy,
and the most common dangers that can derail an otherwise successful income
investing portfolio. At the very least, you will be armed with some things to
consider before contacting a broker or money manager.
Income Investing Defined
Before
we begin, let's define income investing precisely so you know exactly what it
is. The art of good income investing is putting together a collection of assets
such as stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and real estate that generates the highest
possible annual income at the lowest possible risk. Most of this income is paid
out to the investor so he or she can use it in their everyday lives to buy clothes,
pay for the mortgage, take vacations, cover living expenses, give to charity,
or whatever else they desire.
2
How the Social Unrest of the 20th
Century Gave Birth to Income Investing
Despite
the nostalgia for the 19th and 20th centuries, society was actually messy. I'm
not talking about the lack of instant news, video chats, music-on-demand,
twenty-four hour stores, and cars that could go more than ten miles per gallon.
No, I'm talking about the fact that if you were Jewish or Irish, most companies
wouldn't hire you, if you were gay or lesbian, you were sent off to
electroshock therapy, black men and women dealt with the constant threat of mob
lynching and rape, people believed that all Catholics were controlled by the
pope, and if you were a woman, you couldn't get a job doing anything more than
typing, for which you would be paid a fraction of the amount offered to a man for
similar work. Oh, and there wasn't social security or company pension plans,
resulting in most elderly people living in abject poverty.
What
does that have to do with income investing? Everything. These are the
circumstances that caused the rise of income investing and when you look a bit
deeper, it's not difficult to understand why.
The Rise of Income Investing
For
everyone except for well-connected white men, the decent paying labor markets
were effectively closed. One notable exception: If you owned stocks and bonds of companies such as Coca-Cola or PepsiCo,
these investments had no idea if you were black, white, male female, young,
elderly, educated, employed, attractive, short, tall, thin, fat - it didn't
matter. You were sent dividends and interest throughout the year based on the
total size of your investment and how well the company did. That's why it
became a near ironclad rule that once you had money, you saved it and the only
acceptable investing philosophy was income investing. The idea of trading stocks would have been anathema (and nearly
impossible because commissions could run you as high as $200 or $300 per trade
in the 1950's).
3
The Widow's Portfolio Bursts Onto the
Scene
Then
These
social realities meant that women, in particular, were regarded by society as
helpless without a man. Up until the 1980's, you would often hear people
discussing a portfolio designed for income investing as a "widow's
portfolio". This was because it was a fairly routine job of officers in
the trust department of community banks to take the life insurance money a
widow received following her husband's death and put together a collection of
stocks, bonds, and other assets, that would generate enough monthly income for
her to pay the bills, keep the house, and raise the children without a
breadwinner in the home. Her goal, in other words, was not to get rich, but to
do everything possible to maintain a certain level of income that must be kept
safe.
This
whole notion seems bizarre to us. We live in a world where women are just as
likely to have a career as men, and if they do, they may very well make more
money. If your spouse died in the 1950's, however, you had almost no chance of
replacing the full value of his income for your family. That's why income
investing was such an important discipline that every trust officer, bank
employee, and stock broker needed to understand. Those days are gone.
After all, when was the last time you heard AT&T referred to as "a
widow's stock", which could have very well been it's second name a
generation or two ago.
Now
Today,
with the pension system going the way of the dinosaur and the wildly
fluctuating 401(k) balances plaguing most of the nation's working
class, there has been a surge of interest in income investing and how you can
structure your assets to bring in passive income. In
the next few pages, you'll learn the type of assets you may want to buy if you
think income investing is right for you.
4
How Much Cash Should I Expect from an
Income Investing Portfolio?
The 4% Rule
The
rule of thumb for income investing is that if you never want to run out of money, you take 4% of your
account balance out each year. This is commonly referred to on Wall Street as
the 4% rule. (Why 4%, you ask? If the market crashes, 5% has been shown in
academic research to cause you to run out of money in as little as 20 years,
whereas 3% virtually never did.)
Put
another way, if you manage to save $350,000 by retirement at 65 years old
(which would only take $146 per month from the time you were 25 years old and
earning 7% per year), you should be able to make annual withdrawals of $14,000
without ever running out of money. That works out to a self-made pension fund
of roughly $1,166 per month pre-tax.
Not Running Out of Money
If you
are the average retired worker, as of 2016, you receive $1,346.72 in social security
benefits. Add the two together and you have monthly cash income of $2,512.72,
or $30,152.64 per year. All else being equal, an income investing portfolio
structured this way wouldn't run out of money, whether you lived to 67 or 110
years old. By the time you retire, you probably own your own home and have very
little debt, so absent any major medical emergencies, that should allow you to
meet your basic needs. You could easily add another $5,000 or $6,000 to your
annual income by doing part-time work in the community.
If
you're willing to risk running out of money sooner, you can adjust your
withdrawal rate. If you doubled your withdrawal rate to 8% and your investments
earned 6% with 3% inflation, you would
actually lose 5% of the account value annually in real terms. This would be
exaggerated if the market collapsed and you were forced to sell investments
when stocks and bonds were low. Within 20 years, however, you would only be able
to withdrawal $500 to $600 per month at a time when that represented the same
as only $300 today.
5
What Types of Investments Should I Hold
in an Income Portfolio?
3 Types of Investments to Consider
When
you put together your income investing portfolio you are going to have three
major "buckets" of potential investments. These are:
1.
Dividend Paying Stocks: This includes both common stocks and preferred stocks.
These companies mail checks for a portion of the profit to shareholders based
on the number of shares they own. You want to choose companies that have safe dividend payout ratios,
meaning they only distribute 40% to 50% of annual profit, reinvesting the rest
back into the business to keep it growing. In today's market, a dividend yield of 4% to 6% is generally considered good.
2.
Bonds: Your choices when it
comes to bonds are vast. You can own government bonds, agency
bonds, municipal bonds,
savings bonds, and more. Whether you buy corporate or municipal bonds depends
on your personal taxable equivalent yield. You shouldn't buy bonds with
maturities of longer than 5-8 years because you face duration risk, which means
the bonds can fluctuate wildly like stocks in response to changes in the Federal Reserve controlled interest rates.
3.
Real Estate: You
can own rental property outright or invest through REITs. Real estate
has its own tax rules and some people are more comfortable with it because it
naturally protects you against high inflation. Many income investing portfolios
have a heavy real estate component because the tangible nature lets those
living on an income investing portfolio drive by the property, see that it
still exists, and reassure themselves that even if the market has fallen, they
still own the deed. Psychologically, that can give them the needed peace of
mind to hang on and stick to their financial plan during turbulent times.
Let's
look at each category closer to get a better idea of appropriate investments
for income investing portfolios.
6
What To Look for In Dividend Stocks for
an Income Investing Portfolio
Positive Characteristics of Dividend Stocks
In our
personal income investing portfolios, we would want dividend stocks that had
several characteristics such as:
- A
dividend payout ratio of 50% or less with the rest going back into the
company's business for future growth. If a business
pays out too much of its profit, it can hurt the firm's competitive
position. According to some academic research, a lot of the credit crisis
that occurred between 2007-2009 and changed Wall Street forever could have
been avoided if banks had lowered their dividend payout ratios.
- A
dividend yield of between 2% and 6%. That means if a
company has a $30 stock price, it pays annual cash dividends of between
$0.60 and $1.80 per share.
- The
company should have generated positive earnings with no losses every year
for the past three years, at minimum.
Income investing is about protecting your money, not hitting the ball out
of the park with risky stock picks.
- A
proven track record of increasing dividends. If management is shareholder-friendly, it will be
more interested in returning excess cash to stockholders than expanding
the empire, especially in mature businesses that don't have a lot of room
to grow.
- A
high return on equity, or ROE, with little or no corporate debt. If a company can earn high returns on equity with
little or no debt, it usually has a better-than-average business. This can
provide a bigger cushion in a recessionand
help keep the dividend checks flowing.
These
can help you understand the type of dividend stocks you may want to consider
when building an income investing portfolio:
- What Is Dividend Yield and
How Is It Calculated?
- All About Dividends - A 5
Part Guide to Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Dividends
- Selecting High Dividend
Stocks
- Why Dividend Stocks Tend
to Fall Less
- Determining a Stock's
Dividend Payout Ratio
Now,
onto bonds!
7
Bonds in an Income Investing Portfolio
Characteristics of Bonds to Consider or Avoid
Bonds
are often considered the cornerstone of income investing because they generally
fluctuate much less than stocks. With a bond, you are
lending money to the company or government that issues it. With a stock, you
own a piece of a business. The potential profit from bonds are much more
limited but in the event of bankruptcy, you have a better chance of recouping
your investment.
That’s
not to say bonds are without risk. In fact, bonds have a unique set of risks
for income investors. Here’s what we would be looking for if we were putting
together an income investing portfolio with bonds:
- Your choices include bonds such as municipal bonds that offer tax advantages. A better choice may be bond
funds, which you can learn all about in bonds vs. bond funds.
You can learn more by reading tests of safety for
municipal bonds, which will explain some of the things you may
want to look for when you are choosing individual bonds for your
portfolio.
- One of the biggest risks is
something called bond duration. When putting together an income investing
portfolio, you typically shouldn’t buy bonds that mature in more than 5-8
years because changes they can lose a lot of value if
No comments:
Post a Comment