Retirees: 1 trick to max out your passive income with dividend stocks

Following this approach could boost your passive income.

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

The stock market’s recent challenges mean that a number of stocks have relatively high dividend yields at the present time. As such, many investors may be seeking to improve their passive income through purchasing high-yielding stocks.

While this can be a sound strategy, considering a company’s dividend prospects over the long run could be a better idea. A high yield today may not translate into a growing and sustainable passive income in the coming years.

As such, focusing on dividend prospects, rather than solely on dividend yield, could be a shrewd move – especially after the market crash.

Dividend prospects

The dividend prospects for any business can be measured by their affordability, as well as by their potential to rise over the long term. In terms of affordability, there is little point in buying a stock with a high yield when its dividend payments are unlikely to be met over the medium term.

Therefore, assessing a stock’s headroom when making its shareholder payouts is a worthwhile move. This can be achieved by dividing net profit by dividends paid to determine how many times a company is able to make its shareholder payout. A figure of less than one suggests that dividends could be reduced in the near term.

As well as checking the affordability of a company’s dividends, it makes sense to consider their growth potential. This is arguably more subjective than considering dividend affordability, since it hinges to a large extent on the future profitability of the company in question. However, by considering its operating environment, past dividend growth, and the attitude of its management team towards reinvesting profits, it is possible to ascertain the likelihood for dividends to rise at a fast pace over the long term.

Buying opportunities

Clearly, at the present time the prospects for dividend stocks are relatively challenging. Investors may become cautious about the affordability and growth prospects of dividends across a range of companies.

However, history shows that while economic challenges can be painful in the short run, the global economy has always recovered from recessions to return to growth. Therefore, today could be a good buying opportunity while many stocks have high yields and low valuations. They may still be able to post resilient shareholder payouts and raise them at an above-inflation pace over the coming years.

Relative appeal

Certainly, there may be less risky means of generating a passive income at the present time. You are less likely, for example, to lose money on cash or bonds. But those assets also fail to have the passive income potential of stocks, and would require a larger amount of capital to produce a similar income level due to their lower returns.

As such, now could be the right time to buy dividend shares to enjoy a relatively high passive income. By assessing their dividend prospects, in terms of affordability and growth potential, you can enjoy a higher income return.

More on Investing Articles

Calendar showing the date of 5th April on desk in a house
Investing Articles

Investors are rushing to buy these before the Stocks and Shares ISA deadline. Should we join in?

Despite geopolitical troubles causing so much pain in the world, Stocks and Shares ISA investors in the UK are keeping…

Read more »

Mature friends at a dinner party
Investing Articles

How much do you need in a Stocks and Shares ISA for a £10,000 second income?

Ben McPoland highlights a FTSE 100 dividend stock yielding 7% that could contribute nicely to an ISA generating a second…

Read more »

Close-up of a woman holding modern polymer ten, twenty and fifty pound notes.
Investing Articles

How big a Stocks and Shares ISA is needed to target £500 of monthly passive income?

Christopher Ruane explains how a Stocks and Shares ISA could potentially earn someone thousands of pounds in dividends per year.

Read more »

British pound data
Investing Articles

With the stock market down, here are 2 potential ISA bargains to consider right now

When the stock market dips, investors looking at long-term prospects should seek out cheap shares, right? I have my eye…

Read more »

Mature black woman at home texting on her cell phone while sitting on the couch
Investing Articles

Want a £1m Stocks and Shares ISA? Step 1 starts before 5 April

Dr James Fox explains why the Stocks and Shares ISA is an incredible vehicle, and why investors may want to…

Read more »

Happy woman commuting on a train and checking her mobile phone while using headphones
Investing Articles

2 dirt-cheap stocks to consider buying for an ISA portfolio in April

This pair of UK shares are down by double digits in recent months. Ben McPoland sees both as stocks to…

Read more »

Front view photo of a woman using digital tablet in London
Growth Shares

I think this undervalued penny stock has serious potential to outperform

Jon Smith points out a penny stock that's started to rise as the company pushes ahead with a transformation that…

Read more »

Close-up of children holding a planet at the beach
Investing Articles

2 dividend-paying investment trusts to consider for a Stocks and Shares ISA

These two London-listed funds source their dividends globally, offering income investors diversification inside an ISA portfolio.

Read more »