Stocks Going Ex Dividend the Fourth Week of November

Here is our latest update on the stock trading technique called ‘Buying Dividends,’ also commonly referred to as ‘Dividend Capture.’ This is the process of buying stocks before the ex dividend date and selling the stock shortly after the ex date at about the same price, yet still being entitled to the dividend. This technique generally works only in bull markets, and can work in flat or choppy markets, but you need to avoid the technique during bear markets.

In order to be entitled to the dividend, you have to buy the stock before the ex-dividend date, and you can’t sell the stock until after the ex date. The actual dividend may not be paid for another few weeks.

WallStreetNewsNetwork.com has compiled a downloadable and sortable list of the stocks going ex dividend in the near future. The list contains many dividend paying companies, lots with market caps over $500 million, and yields over 2%. Here are a few examples showing the stock symbol, the ex-dividend date, the dividend amount, and yield.

Barnes Group, Inc. B 11/21/2016 0.13 1.2%
Dun & Bradstreet Corporation DNB 11/21/2016 0.48 1.7%
Hershey Company HSY 11/21/2016 0.62 2.5%
Vulcan Materials Company VMC 11/21/2016 0.20 0.6%
Applied Materials, Inc. AMAT 11/22/2016 0.10 1.4%
Carnival Corporation CCL 11/22/2016 0.35 2.8%
Carnival Corporation CUK 11/22/2016 0.35 2.8%

The additional ex-dividend stocks can be found here at wstnn.com. (If you have been to the website before, and the latest link doesn’t show up, you may have to empty your cache.) If you like dividend stocks, you should check out some of the other high yield stock lists at WallStreetNewsNetwork.com or WStNN.com. Most of the lists are free.

Dividend definitions:

Declaration date: the day that the company declares that there is going to be an upcoming dividend.

Ex-dividend date: the day on which if you buy the stock, you would not be entitled to that particular dividend; or the first day on which a shareholder can sell the shares and still be entitled to the dividend.

Monthly Dividend Stock List

Record date: the day when you must be on the company’s books as a shareholder to receive the dividend. The ex-dividend date is normally set for stocks at two business days before the record date.

Payment date: the day on which the dividend payment is actually made, which can be as long at two months after the ex date.

Book now available: Buying Dividends Revised and Expanded

Book now available: Stock Market Trivia Makes a Great Gift!
Don’t forget to reconfirm the ex-dividend date with the company before implementing this technique.

Disclosure: Author did not own any of the above at the time the article was written.


How to Invest in the Halloween Industry

Just a week to go until Halloween. You still have time to buy your candy, for the trick-or-treaters, provide income for the candy companies. Maybe you can find some treats, not tricks, in the following Halloween stocks.

Watching horror movies is one of the popular activities of teenagers on Halloween. Netflix (NFLX), the largest provider of videos in the US, has a huge number of scary movies in its collection of titles. The stock trades as 146 times forward earnings. Earnings for the latest quarter were up 26.8% on a rise of 8.8% in revenues.

A major producer of scary movies is Lions Gate Entertainment (LGF), which has made such films as American Psycho, Ginger Snaps, Route 666, The Devil’s Rejects, House of the Dead 2, Saw VI, See No Evil, Hostel: Part II, My Bloody Valentine 3D and many others. Lionsgate has a price to earnings ratio of 287 and pays a yield of 1.8%.

The biggest beneficiaries of Halloween are the candy companies. Hershey Foods (HSY) is the large chocolate and confectionery company made famous by its Hershey Kisses and Hershey Bars. The stock has a P/E of 21, and a yield of 2.5%.

Tootsie Roll Industries (TR) makes all kinds of candy for trick-or-treaters including Tootsie Rolls, Tootsie Roll Pops, Caramel Apple Pops, Charms, Blow-Pops, Blue Razz, Zip-A-Dee Pops, Cella’s, Mason Dots, Mason Crows, Junior Mint, Charleston Chew, Sugar Daddys, and Sugar Babies. The stock has a P/E of 26.5 and a yield of 1.0%.

Halloween costumes and decorations are available at discount retailers such as Wal-Mart (WMT). It has a P/E of 16, and a yield of 2.9%.

If you like interesting stock industries, such as coffee stocks, robotics stocks, and chocolate and candy stocks, check out many of the lists here at WallStreetNewsNetwork.com.

Disclosure: Author didn’t own any of the above at the time the article was written.