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3 Vanguard Dividend ETFs That Could Make You Rich

KXLY April 11, 2021 5:30 AM newsfeedback@fool.com (Katie Brockman) Posted: Updated: April 11, 2021 6:41 AM Dividend stocks can be a smart addition to your portfolio, as they provide long-term earning potential as well as a source of passive income. However, choosing dividend stocks can be challenging. Investing in individual stocks requires a substantial amount of research, and it’s often expensive as well. If you’re looking for a less research-intensive approach, investing in a dividend ETF may be your best bet. Each ETF can contain hundreds of different stocks, which instantly diversifies your portfolio and limits your risk. There are many dividend ETFs to choose from, but these three Vanguard powerhouses are a great place to start.

How to Score Sturdy International Dividends on the Cheap

“VYMI goes overseas in search of dividend income and what it does is it looks at the entire equity opportunity set outside the U.S. It takes the highest-yielding half of those stocks, and it folds them into its portfolio, weighting them by their market capitalization,” said Morningstar’s Ben Johnson. Ex-U.S. developed market dividend payers often feature larger yields than their U.S. counterparts, an assertion proven by comparing large- and mega-cap dividend stocks from familiar dividend sectors such as consumer staples, energy, financial services and telecommunications. VYMI’s Steady Approach Many foreign companies tie payouts to earnings, meaning some ex-US dividend growers also have rising profitability. Those firms aren’t burdened by dividends and can sustain payouts.

Retired DIY Investor: Is It Time to Delegate?

When is it time for a committed do-it-yourself investor to simplify and turn the reins over to someone else? That’s a question weighing on the mind of Grace, a 66-year-old retired attorney. An avid stock investor, she actively oversees a $2.3 million portfolio for herself and her husband Doug, 71. Doug retired from his career in the pharmaceutical industry a year ago, and Grace has been retired for about five years. The couple has two children. Both are in their 30s and thriving in their careers; one is married and has two young children. Grace truly enjoys stock investing. I am the financial person in the household. I love to follow the market, tweak investments, and pounce on a good stock when it meets my targets, she said. The portfolio she oversees numbers more than 100 holdings, mainly individual dividend-paying stocks.

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