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Dividends

You know that buying a stock makes you part owner of a company, theoretically with millions of other people. But, while ownership has its privileges (at minimum you get a neat stock certificate and an invitation to the annual meeting), being an owner doesn't necessarily pay. Sure, you make money if the stock goes up, but only if you sell, and you can, in theory, lose all the value of your investment if the stock tanks.

Enter the dividend. Here, you get money simply from holding the stock. Companies pay a yield, which is expressed in a percentage based on the stock's price. For example, if a stock trades at $10, and pays a 10% annual yield, your dividend payment would be a $1. (Usually, companies break out the payments quarterly, so, using our example, you¿d get, well, a quarter each quarter.)

Companies that pay dividends fall into a few categories. First, you've got your big, stable companies that generate enough cash that it makes sense to throw some back to shareholders. Next, there are businesses, like real estate investment trusts, that are in the business of sitting back and receiving cash, then distributing it to holders. And, then there are companies that need to dangle a high dividend yield like a carrot to ease investor fears. Cigarette-maker Altria has been doing this for years.

Simply because a company pays a dividend doesn't make it a good investment. After all, you may want to take a chance on a growth stock that can move higher in price than dividend payers are known to do. But, you can¿t beat the safety of knowing that, even if a stock doesn't move in a year, you¿re at least making something off your investment.

Home / Personal Finance / Financial Planning / Real Estate & Mortgage

Pending Homes Sales Drop to All-time Low

 
FOXBusiness
 

According to the National Association of Realtors’ (NAR) Pending Home Sales Index, the number of homes under contract fell 1.9% to 84.6 in February from January’s revised estimate of 86.2.

February's pending home sales number is a 21.4% drop from February 2007.

According to Dow Jones, the index was expected to drop by 1.1% among private analysts.

NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun said the data has both positive and negative implications. 

“The slip in pending home sales implies we’re not out of the woods yet, though an era of successive deep sales declines appears to be over,” he said in a release.

When broken down by region, the number of homes under contract rose 3.2% to 71.8 in the Northeast, but that number is still down 25.4% from this time last year. Pending sales fell to 82.7 in the Midwest, a 3.7% drop from January and a 17.4% decline from February 2007.

In the South, the index for February fell to 85.0, a 5.5% drop from January and 30.3% drop from the same time last year. The West saw a 9.8% drop to 84.6 in pending home sales since January, which is a 17.1% decrease from February 2007, according to the National Association of Realtors.

The pending home sales index is an indicator based upon the pending sale of homes, or homes which are under contract, but the sale is not expected to be final for one to two months.

 

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