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Dividends Still Don't Lie - by Kelley Wright (Hardcover)

Dividends Still Don't Lie - by  Kelley Wright (Hardcover)
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Last Price: 31.49 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>A timely follow-up to the bestselling classic <i>Dividends Don't Lie</i></p> <p>In 1988 Geraldine Weiss wrote the classic <i>Dividends Don't Lie</i>, which focused on the Dividend-Yield Theory as a method of producing consistent gains in the stock market. Today, the approach of using the dividend yield to identify values in blue chip stocks still outperforms most investment methods on a risk-adjusted basis.</p> <p>Written by Kelley Wright, Managing Editor of <i>Investment Quality Trends</i>, with a new Foreword by Geraldine Weiss, this book teaches a value-based strategy to investing, one that uses a stock's dividend yield as the primary measure of value. Rather than emphasize the price cycles of a stock, the company's products, market strategy or other factors, this guide stresses dividend-yield patterns.</p> <ul> <li>Details a straightforward system of investing in stick-to-quality blue-chip stocks with reliable dividend histories</li> <li>Discusses how to buy and sell when dividend yields instruct you to do so</li> <li>Investors looking for safety and transparency will quickly discover how dividends offer the yields they desire</li> </ul> <p>With <i>Dividends Still Don't Lie, </i> you'll gain the confidence to make sophisticated stock market decisions and obtain solid value for your investment dollars.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br><p>In 1988, Geraldine Weiss wrote the classic <i>Dividends Don't Lie</i>. That book detailed the dividend-value strategy <i>behind Investment Quality Trends</i>, the highly successful newsletter Weiss founded and Kelley Wright now edits. Today, more than twenty years later, the investment world has changed dramatically because of computer technology and the Internet. Tremendous amounts of data and information can be gathered, sorted, and analyzed in a matter of minutes, and what used to take weeks or months at a library can now be accomplished in one evening with a computer. What hasn't changed is the success of the dividend-value strategy for producing consistent gains in the stock market <i>Dividends Still Don't Lie</i> shows how the stock market still rewards investors who recognize and appreciate good value. <p>Rather than emphasize price alone or a company's sector, products, or other analytical factors, the dividend-value strategy uses dividend-yield patterns to make buying and selling decisions. In simple terms: a stock is most attractive when it offers a high-dividend yield. As investors rush in to lock down the high yield, their buying pushes the price higher. Eventually the price reaches an area where the current yield is no longer attractive and buying stops. With no new buyers to push the stock price higher, the price begins to decline--and early investors sell and take their profits. Wright shows that, by understanding the historical dividend-yield pattern of a company, you will be better informed as to whether the stock offers much value, little value, or value that's somewhere in-between. <p>Four plus decades of research have shown that blue chip companies, those with long records of consistent, competent performance, are far more predictable than are upstarts or less established companies with erratic records of earnings and dividend payments. In short, the dividend-value strategy is a proven, commonsense approach that has ultimately led to long-term results. <i>Dividends Still Don't Lie</i> will show you how to master the stock market by successfully investing in high- quality, dividend-paying blue chip stocks.<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><p><b>KELLEY WRIGHT</b> is Chief Investment Officer and Portfolio Manager at I.Q. Trends Private Client Asset Management. He is also Managing Editor of the <i>Investment Quality Trends</i> newsletter. Since 1989, Wright has been a private money manager and has served as Chief Investment Officer to three investment management firms. In 2002, he was handpicked by the legendary Geraldine Weiss to succeed her as Managing Editor of the number one rated <i>Investment Quality Trends</i> newsletter she started in 1966. Wright is an active lecturer nationwide at trade shows and investment conferences and a frequent guest on both television and radio.

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