Dividend Income And Dogs Of The Dow Strategies Outperforming

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With a little more than a fourth of the year behind investors, and in the face of rising interest rates, dividend paying stocks have been insulated from some of the equity market volatility that has impacted growth stocks. Maybe one of the better known income investment strategies is investing in the Dogs of the Dow. The popularity of the strategy is its singular focus on dividend yield. The Dogs of the Dow strategy is one where investors select the ten stocks that have the highest dividend yield from the stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Index after the close of business on the last trading day of the year. Once the ten stocks are determined, an investor invests an equal dollar amount in each of the ten stocks and holds them for the entire next year. As the below table shows, the year to date return for the Dow Dogs through April 14, 2022 equals 6.5% versus the Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (DIA) down -4.8% and the SPDR S&P 500 Index ETF (SPY) down -7.5%. The strategy has had mixed results over the years.

Dow Dogs 2022 year to date performance as of April 14, 2022

The Dow Dogs’ strategy is solely focused on dividend yield and the below chart includes other dividend focused equity strategies. The top four performing strategies are mostly dividend income ones. Each of the top four performing ones are also outperforming the broader S&P 500 Index. The top performing one is the Invesco S&P 500 Pure Value ETF (RPV), up 7.2% and the bottom performing strategy is the Invesco Pure Growth ETF (RPG), down -17.7% year to date. The Pure Value ETF strategy is not a pure dividend focused one, however, out of the 119 stocks in the index, only 12 do not pay a dividend.

Income focused ETF returns year to date through April 14, 2022

The growth style has mostly outperformed value since the end of the 2008/2009 financial. The first chart below shows this outperformance. The second chart is a shorter three year time frame, and since the pandemic bottom in March of 2020, outperformance has vacillated between growth and value. Again, the value style is outperforming this year.

Invesco Pure Value RPV versus Pure Growth (<span>RPG</span>) 15 year relative performance
Invesco Pure Value RPV versus Pure Growth (<span>RPG</span>) 3-year relative performance

Contributing to value’s outperformance is its overweight in the financial sector, 31% versus 12.5% for growth. The other two outperforming sectors for pure value are Consumer Staples and Materials, with the pure growth style having no exposure to those two sectors. With higher interest rates likely this year, this could serve as more of a benefit for value style stocks versus growth style ones.

Disclosure: Firm/Family long DOW, MRK, VZ, INTC, MMM

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Editor’s Note: The summary bullets for this article were chosen by Seeking Alpha editors.

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