Zorrofan Posted April 14, 2009 Share Posted April 14, 2009 Alas, it has been many a decade since old Zorro saw the inside of a school, so please help old Zorro out! Here is my question.... I need some help calculating long term results. If one invests in a company's shares paying a 10% yield, after a 50% drop in share value, and an expected 5% growth in dividends each year how do you calculate results over the long term if: 1. the company pays 10% dividend for 5 years, you reinvest the dividends every quarter 2. After 5 years, stock price doubles in value 3. Each year dividend increase 5% What I am trying to do is two things: calculate the total return and try and figure out how WEB does this in his head so easily.... Thanks Cheers Zorro Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
woodstove Posted April 15, 2009 Share Posted April 15, 2009 OK, this is not the right way, but I'll try something without paper. Think of situation as a bond, bought at price $50 on par $100. There will be capital gain $50 on maturity in 5th year, which is simple return of $10 per year or 20 pct/yr on $50 cost. There is also dividend (interest) yield of $5, current yield 10 pct. Hence bond returns something like 30 pct/year for 5 years, some of that being taxed as div/int and some as capital gain. Any decision to re-invest future dividends is a distinct matter. The investment decision today is whether 30 pct pretax return is sufficient, given your knowledge of the robustness of "bond", ie are they backed by a business capable of paying dividends, will the price return to par (approx value), etc. The usual "margin of safety" considerations. I know that's not exactly the question which you asked, but believe that approach, separating out the current yield and the capital gain yield, and interpreting the latter as a simple return ignoring compounding, may be useful to you. It can be done while standing in the shower, driving etc. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ericd1 Posted April 15, 2009 Share Posted April 15, 2009 ZF - Here's my back of the napkin approach Stock gain -- A $10 stock doubles to $20 in five years = ~14.4% (72/5 = 14.4) I used the rule of 72 -- Divide 72 by the number of years yields approx compound annual growth rate. (10 yrs ~ 7.2%, 5 yrs 14.4%). It also works backwards, at 10% you'll double your investment in 7.2 years. A handy formula to remember! Dividend yield -- Initial dividend 10%, approx final dividend 5% (w/o compounding), avg dividend ~ 7.5% Total compound annual return 14.4% + 7.5% = 21.9% Using a spreadsheet and CAGR formulas I calculated the ending value of the $10.00 investment as $28.12, a 181% gain, or 23% annually using annual reinvestment of dividends. Thus the dividend re-investment is actually 1.1% more per year than my back of the napkin approach. The compound annual growth rate formula I used -- CAGR = (1+ total return %) ^ (1/years) -1 or, CAGR = (1+ 1.81) ^ (1/5) -1 = 23% (^ is exponent symbol 4^2=16) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ragnarisapirate Posted April 15, 2009 Share Posted April 15, 2009 If you need to break out a calculator, the deal probably isn't good enough... ;-) Not that you are citing a specific example, but the doubling of price in 5 years alone is pretty good. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zorrofan Posted April 15, 2009 Author Share Posted April 15, 2009 Guys, thanks for the comments. Once again proving the quality of the board..... cheers Zorro Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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