Quality Dividend Stocks to Buy Now

Even the best companies can make terrible investments if you overpay. A Yale study looking at market returns from 1881 to 2016 found that starting P/E ratio had a significant effect on total returns out to 30 years. What's more, in the past few decades, valuation has explained about 46% of the market's forward 5-year returns. Note that 1-year returns have little correlation to valuations because they are driven by volatile and often irrational short-term sentiment.

In other words, buy-and-hold investors can't just blindly buy great companies at any price but need to remember Buffett's famous quote, “It's far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price.”

The corollary to that quote is what I call “the Buffett rule,” which is to never pay more than fair value for even the highest-quality companies. Doing so will lower your total returns, and since something great is always on sale, there is no reason to jump the gun on buying quality, low-risk dividend stocks.

After all, patience is the ultimate virtue of the long-term investor, because as Buffett also said, “the stock market is designed to transfer money from the active to the patient.”

But there's another reason why valuation is always worth keeping in mind.

Read the full article at Seeking Alpha.

Don’t Stop Here

More To Explore

AI Hardware Boom and Robotics Take Center Stage

Today’s Market Snapshot U.S. stocks drifted yesterday as bullish AI chatter clashed with mixed signals from cyclical earnings, leaving major indexes pinned near the flatline.

SoftBank’s Roze Spin-Off and Amazon Ad Surge

Opening Recap Market Pulse: Equities drifted higher yesterday despite the Fed’s tame commentary, with tech wobbling on Tesla’s earnings jitters while broader sectors held firm.