Warren Buffett: Dividends Are The Key To Investing Success | Onlyinvesting.info



Investing with the intention of generating dividend income has grown increasingly popular among retail investors, and in this video, Buffett explains why he believes that dividends can be extremely valuable when considering whether to invest in a particular stock.

Related Post

45 thoughts on “Warren Buffett: Dividends Are The Key To Investing Success | Onlyinvesting.info”
  1. If you wanna be successful, you must take responsibility for your emotions, not place the blame on others. In addition to making you feel more guilty about your faults, pointing the finger at others will only serve to increase your sense of personal accountability. There's always a risk in every investment, yet people still invest and succeed. You must look outward if you wanna be successful in life…

  2. Those are some of the most dishonest comments made by the rich. There is absolutely nothing stopping them from going to the US Treasury website and just givong them the additional amount they think is "fair" of taxes they don't pay.

    Looking at the Treasury website, you will realize that almost no one does that voluntarily.

  3. Why is compound interest used as a concept with stock ownership. Compound interest implies continual growth of interest added to principle. Whereas, stock values go up and down? Stock price increases are based on someon'e willingness to pay a higher price for the stock-not guaranteed interest over time.

  4. Nobody can become financially successful overnight. They put in background work but we tend to see the finished part. Fear is a dangerous component, hindering us from taking bold steps we need in other to reach our goals. you have to contend with inflation, recession, decisions from the Feds and all. I was able to increase my portfolio by $289k in months. You have to seek for help in the right places.

  5. Buffet's only success was buying Berkshire at a time when the market was sideways with its dividends for years.
    and being able to use Berkshire's capital to buy other companies.
    today this is not possible. stocks go up faster than dividends, so you can never buy a company because its capitalization will go up faster than your dividend accumulation

  6. Dividends are a great thing, but they’re only really effective for passive income when you either have somewheres over 20 to 25 thousand shares of a high yielding stock. Meaning you likely need to have a few hundred thousand if not more invested in it. Re-investing dividends back into the same stock certainly does snowball with compound interest, but you only really start seeing it after 20 years of never stopping and likely needing to add additional money of your own with it….so it’ll be time consuming and costly. The way I see it if you have a million dollars at some point, that’d be enough to create a portfolio that would pay you between 50 to 70 thousand in dividend income

  7. My opinion for young people is you need to be both a dividend investor and a growth investor, basically how i made my first million also i use an FA Olivia Rene Reyes. For example if I just got a 1000% gain on Tesla and then pulled 85% of the money out and went into a load of more stable dividend stocks like CVX So I would say diversify, but also use those growth opportunities to build the capital to invest in the dividend payers (or in cash flowing real estate)

  8. To obtain financial freedom, one needs to be a business owner, an investor or both generating passive income particularly on a monthly basis… Thank to Mrs .Louise O'Brien for helping me achieve this.

  9. The man was hoping a billionaire like Buffett would be on his side with his "dividends should be tax-free" comment, but Buffett instead acknowledges injustice in the tax system in his favor, seeing how his tax rate is lower than his own secretary.
    Buffett is a man with integrity and good values. Have lots of respect for him

  10. 07:00 Smart man, but a stupid comment…to feel guilty about his tax rate. He employs thousands of people and runs lots of businesses that generate enormous amounts of tax dollars….while providing his employees with salaries, housing, medical care, etc. It's the same with Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos. All of them provide massive amounts of good will to the country and our society. Who gives a $hit what their motivation is.

  11. Dividends are what holds your portfolio value during bad economic cycles. Stock prices fall, but dividends are often slow to react, if at all; and it’s huge as long as you have enough dividend stocks and reinvest everything. Be measured and don’t just leave your investment in the hands of the managers. Keep interested, watch everything, and learn what matters.

  12. Without dividends on your 1980s Coca-Cola stock, you're nothing.
    Same Statler and Waldorf act for the past 40 years, great investment you made once, risking other peoples money.
    Berkshire is amazingly great, 40 years ago.. too bad YOU missed out.
    Millennials won't even be able to buy a home, let alone see returns on their stock portfolio. Nice and rich experts, teaching you how to make a time machine.

  13. Dividends are dope. Personally, I sometimes use my dividends to buy other dividend and growth stocks for diversification instead of reinvesting in the same stock. To each their own methods though. The good thing is that you’re investing in the first place and that’s what’s important. Salute for the content!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *