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Excerpted from Bogle on Mutual Funds by John C. Bogle, pages 34-36
Many investors do not give much thought to income generation until after they reach retirement. Then they seek not only a reasonable level of income, but income that tends to increase steadily over time. Of our three asset classes, only common stocks - by growing their dividends - can deliver this dual objective. Of course, by investing in common stocks you assume the risk that dividends will decline during periods of recession or depression - sharply, as during the early 1930s, or more moderately, as from 1941 to 1943.
What is truly remarkable is that the record of dividend payments by U.S. corporations heavily favors rising dividends over declining dividends, almost irrespective of prevailing business conditions. Using the 1926-92 base period, annual dividends increased in 57 years, declined moderately (less than 10%) in four years, and declined by more than 10% in another five years. In one year, dividends were unchanged. On average, dividends increased at an annual rate of +4.5% since 1926, nicely exceeding the inflation rate of 3.1%, resulting in real income growth of +1.4% per year. The relationship has been particularly strong since 1950, as Figure 2-4 shows.



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Bogle on Mutual Funds: New Perspectives for the Intelligent Investor, by John C. Bogle, published by Dell Publishing (© 1994) Buy Now | |
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