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How To Create Wealth In The Stock
Market
First and foremost, an opportunistic
strategy for creating wealth in the stock market is needed. And the
opportunistic strategy for creating wealth in the stock market must
have two ingredients, a plan and a goal. The plan must be a
definite, concrete plan of investing that would profit you and your
family for the rest of your lives.
This opportunistic investment plan you
begin should not profit anyone else – not a stockbroker, a mutual
fund or a financial advisor. This means you have to have confidence
in yourself and in your own judgment as to whether the investment
plan you begin has merit. And this means that the investment plan
would and should have already been proven to you!
This definite, concrete plan you begin
for creating wealth through opportunities in the stock market must
also have a goal. The goal should be clear and specific, and once
your have made up your mind to achieve that goal, then go forward
and make that goal a reality.
What are the opportunistic traits of a
strategic investment plan built on concrete that would actually
allow the shareholder to profit through all the turmoil of an up and
down stock market? The secret for creating wealth in the stock
market; no matter what direction the market is heading?
As in what appears to be the most
difficult investment question of all to answer, the answer lies in
simplicity itself – investing in those companies that have a
historical record of raising their dividend every year. Whether or
not you can take this statement of fact to heart is your own
judgment call. But it is this opportunistic trait that can and will
create wealth for you and your family for the rest of your
lives.
A company’s ability to raise its dividend
every year, coupled with stock appreciation is a very powerful
wealth creating formula!
I’m going to provide you with two
examples, though there are many more, some with even better results.
The two examples are from my book, soon to be published by American
Book Publishing – The Stockopoly Plan (where an investment plan and
a goal are written in stone).
The first example would be a stock
purchased in 1990, Comerica (CMA). What led to the purchase of CMA?
– In 1990 CMA had a 21 year history of raising their dividend every
year. Today’s CMA has a 35 year history of raising their dividend
every year. This opportunistic trait in CMA stock has garnished a
little better than a 15 percent return a year, compounded annually
(just by having the dividends reinvested back into the stock each
quarter through those years – I prove this to you in The Stockopoly
Plan), for the past 14 plus years. Today’s CMA stock just recently
touched a new high at $60 dollars a share, with a dividend yield of
around 3˝ percent. In April of 2003 the stock was selling around
$37.50 a share, paying a dividend yield of around 5% a year. Am I
tempted to sell my position in CMA? Do I care if the stock drops
from this lofty price back to $37 a share? Why should I? If the
stock drops back to $37 a share, my dividends being reinvested back
into the stock each quarter purchases more shares, and my dividend
income from CMA simply and dramatically accelerates. I am also
already prepared that if a buy-out offer is ever made for the
company to reap the profits of owning the stock (as well as the
possibility of another stock split).
The second example is (unfortunately) in
my book, also. I say unfortunately because my book is in the final
copy edit stage, so no one has had a chance to read and benefit from
it, and since a buy-out offer was made for the stock last week or
so, the stock will no longer exist (this means a rewrite for me,
before publication). The company in question is the Rouse Co. (RSE),
which was just purchased by General Growth Properties (GGP). Oddly
enough, you’ll find GGP in my book, also – if you bother to pick it
up. Anyway, that’s neither here nor there - RSE, on the takeover bid
jumped over $16.00 a share in one day! Whew! Why couldn’t they have
waited a couple of months until my book was released? RSE had the
opportunistic trait of raising their dividend every year since 1993
and I was quite content with its performance through the
years.
Well, that last paragraph blew my train
of thought on this article. All I can think about at the moment is
my rewrite.
I would like to take this time to explain
something to you. I have never considered myself a writer nor am I a
stock market professional. I am simply a man with 39 years of
experience and a passion for the stock market, trying to share what
wisdom those years have given me. When I sit down to write an
article, I seldom have an idea on what I’m going to say. It was the
same way when I sat down to write my book. I just meant to put down
a few words on paper for my 18-year old son so he would have a
sound, concrete plan for investing in those companies that make up
the stock market (quite frankly – I didn’t want him to blow his
inheritance). Whether you find merit in what I say, I have no idea.
What I do know is that life is just too short to learn everything
you need to learn by yourself, without the help of others.
There, now I’m satisfied with that
ending!
For more excerpts from the book ‘The
Stockopoly Plan’
visit http://www.thestockopolyplan.com
Charles M. O’Melia is an individual
investor with almost 40 years of experience and passion for the
stock market. Author of the book ‘The Stockopoly Plan’, soon to be
released by American Book Publishing.
You have permission to this article
either electronically or in print as long as the author bylines are
included, with a live link, and the article is not changed in any
way (typos, excluded). Please provide a courtesy e-mail to charles@thestockopolyplan.com telling where the article was published.
chassmo99@yahoo.com
Charles M.
O'Melia
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