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Dividend Re-Investment Plans

Dividend Re-Investment Plans. Andre J. Trottier. Introduction. Individual Investor, Retired 1997 Invested from 1975-82 Canadian Moneysaver Articles Leveraging Split Shares Frictional Costs. Topics of Discussion. Frictional Costs DRIP Power of Dividends Efficiency Simplicity

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Dividend Re-Investment Plans

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  1. DividendRe-InvestmentPlans Andre J. Trottier

  2. Introduction • Individual Investor, Retired 1997 • Invested from 1975-82 • Canadian Moneysaver Articles • Leveraging • Split Shares • Frictional Costs

  3. Topics of Discussion • Frictional Costs • DRIP • Power of Dividends • Efficiency • Simplicity • Getting Started

  4. Taxes, Loads & Fees • Most certain components • Negative components • Effective management will do most to enhance returns • Goal be avoiding them…..No • Do they really matter?….Yes

  5. Taxes • Ontario $30,754, MTR 28.16% • Tax Factor = 1.00 = 1.39 1.00 - 0.2816 (MTR) • Earn $1.39 to keep $1.00 • 18.9% VISA = 18.9 X 1.39 or 26.27%

  6. Federal Personal Tax Rates • $30,754 or Less----------16% • $30,754 to $61,508------22% • $61,629 to $100,00------26% • $100,000+------------------29%

  7. Tax Avoidance Strategies • Defer income • Arrange income to be Tax Efficient • Capital gains & dividends • Interest instruments in RSP

  8. Management Expense Ratios (MERs) • Canadian average 2.50% • Was 2.30% in 1997 • US Average 1.35%

  9. Rule of 40 • Take 40 and divide it by the MER • number of years to consume 1/3 of your investment • 40 / 2.5% = 16 yrs • front end load of 33%

  10. Your Mutual Fund Manager Really Charging You? • True Cost per $100,000.00 invested • MER 10 yrs 20 yrs 30 yrs • 1.0% $9,250 $18,130 $25,950 • 1.5% $13,930 $25,920 $36,240 • 2.0% $18,130 $32,970 $45,120 • 3.0% $25,920 $45,120 $59,340 • Fee Impact calculator http://strategis.ic.gc.ca

  11. Diminishing Returns • 1993 43 Top Quartile Mgrs • 1994 14 out the 43 • 1995 5 out the 43 • 1996 2 out the 43 • 1997 0 out the 43

  12. Mutual Fund Facts • “Outperformance” will "Regress to the Mean" • the 1990s 80% of Canadian Funds"Did not beat the averages" • Efficient investing: • Never pay >2% commission, total • Funds charge 2.5%/yr

  13. Regression to the Mean

  14. Tradex Equity Fund • -open only to public servants • -since 1961, avg 11% return/yr • -Philips Hager & North • - Globefund top 15 funds for 15 year performance • -"lucky to be a Public Servant“ • Reason 1.35% MER

  15. John Bogle • The easiest and surest way for a fund to achieve the top quartile in investment performance among peer funds is to achieve the bottom quartile in expenses.

  16. Nortel Employee • BMO Funds 1.5% MER • YearAmount1.5% FeeDirect • 2001 $120,000 $1,800 $120,000 • 2010 $332,769 $4,991 $375,079 • 2020 $1,033,531 $15,502 $1,330,768 • 2027 $2,284,806 $34,272 $3,229,041

  17. A. Trottier’s Situation • AGF American Growth 2.88% • AIC Advantage 2 2.72% • AGF International Stock Class 2.85% • Fidelity Focus Health Care 2.68%

  18. 2.80% MER Chart • YearAmount2.8% FeeDirect • 2001 $120,000 $3,360 $120,000 • 2010 $299,577 $8,388 $375,097 • 2020 $827,915 $23,181 $1,330,768 • 2027 $1,706,435 $47,780 $3,229,041 • 2027 $2,284,806 $34,272 $3,229,041

  19. MER Effect on Wealth

  20. MER and Returns

  21. Fund Problems • To equal TSE 300, must beat it by 2.5% to be equal • Cash position earns low returns • Transaction costs • Manager focused on “Performance”

  22. Tax Efficiency • Capital Gains distributed to holders • Holders pay the tax • No control, just tax liability • Unrealized Capital Gains • i. e. MSFT on original IPO • AIC Advantage BRK.A at $3500 • 4th Qtr purchase = year’s liability

  23. 10 yr Pre & Post Tax Returns (US )

  24. Don’t Worry • No big deal, you don’t have to worry about risking your life savings, “We do that for you.”

  25. Gold, Frankincense and MER • Most certain aspect • Distinctly “negative” aspect • Effective mgmt=enhanced returns • Do Loads & Fees matter? • ABSOLUTELY

  26. The Money Machine How the mutual fund Industry worksDaniel Stoffman • Page 220 • Should I buy individual stocks as well as, or instead of mutual funds? • If you've read this far, you've probably figured this out for yourself.

  27. DRIP Defined • Dividends are not paid to holder • Money buys additional shares • Additional shares yield dividend • These dividends create additional shares • Thus the Dividend Effect

  28. Dividend Effect • dividend growth - 4% annually • YearDividend • 1$5.50 • 2$5.72 • 5$6.43 • 10$7.83 • 12 $8.47

  29. Effect of Increasing Dividends • Year Price (8%) Dividend (4%) Yield on Cost 1 $10.00 0.25 2.50 % 5 $14.64 0.30 3.04 % 10 $21.59 0.37 3.70 % 25 $68.48 0.66 6.66 %

  30. Hawaiian Electric (HE)

  31. HE, no DRIP

  32. HE, DRIP

  33. HE Chart

  34. HE Long Term

  35. Dividends &Capital Growth • 1952, farmer retired with $100,000 • Invested in CSBs • 1983 son “What if BMO in 52” • BMO, 3400 shares in 1952 • 1983, with splits 17,000 shares worth $456,875 • Ignoring Dividends of $410,993

  36. Dividends &Capital Growth • Barron’s Article April 1999 • $100 invested in S&P 500 in 1925 • 1999 would be $9,600 • With DRIP $235,000

  37. Dividend Growth

  38. BMO no DRIP

  39. BMO with DRIP

  40. BMO with DRIP+$50/mth OCP

  41. BCE no DRIP

  42. BCE with DRIP

  43. BCE with DRIP Today

  44. BCE DRIP with$50/mth OCP

  45. XOM no DRIP

  46. XOM with DRIP

  47. Cemil Otar’s DRIP

  48. Cemil’ DRIP Summary

  49. The 5% DRIP Advantage • Some cos offer a 5% discount on DRIPs and OCP • netstockdirect.com-115 US cos • Canadian Companies • MDS & W (5% on DRIPS) • TD (2.5% on DRIPs) • TA (5% on DRIPs & OCP)

  50. Cdn Cos Paying Dividends Shrinking • 1981 - 100 cos • 1991 - 80 cos • 2000 - 60 cos • 2001 - 57 cos

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