Better To Invest In Growth Stocks Over Dividend Stocks For Younger Investors (2024)

Do you know who missed out on great growth stocks like Apple, Netflix, Google, Meta, NVIDIA and more over the last 10-20 years? Dividend stock investors. For younger investors (<40), I believe it's better to invest mostly in growth stocks over dividend stocks. With growth stocks, you increase your chances of accumulating more capital quickly.

You'd rather invest in a company that is providing more capital appreciation while you are working. After all, earning dividend income is less important when you have job income. Instead, building as big of a financial nut as possible with growth stocks is more important.

However, once you are retired or close to retiring, you can shift toward dividend stocks for income. You shouldn't have as high of a tax bill in retirement due to a lack of W2 income. Further, dividend stocks are also relatively less volatile given their stronger balance sheets.

Dividend stock investing is a great source of passive income. In fact, I rank dividend stocks as a top source of passive income. The problem is, with dividend yields relatively low at 1-3% you need a lot of capital to generate any sort of meaningful income. Further, as a minority investor, there's no way to improve the dividend payout ratio.

Even if you have a $1,000,000 dividend stock portfolio yielding 2% that's only $20,000 a year in dividend income. Remember, the safest withdrawal rate in retirement does not touch principal. Further, you must ask yourself whether such yields are worth the investment risk.

Growth Stocks Over Dividend Stocks For Younger Investors

If you're relatively young, say under 40 years old, investing the majority of your equity exposure in dividend-yielding stocks is a suboptimal investment strategy. It's much better to invest in growth stocks over dividend stocks.

You're likely earning W2 income, so you don't need more income to pay more taxes with dividend stocks. Further, your goal is to build a large of a capital stack as fast as possible so you can be free sooner.

If you decided to invest in dividend stocks while you are young, you'll be hoping for filet mignon for decades while you eat Hamburger Helper in the meantime. When you reach your desired age for retirement, you might just be asking yourself, “Where the hell is the feast?

Biggest Gains Have Come From Growth Stocks

Out of the few multi-bagger return stocks I've had over the past 20 years, none of them have been dividend stocks. Over time, dividend stocks will provide healthy returns. But if you are like me, you'd rather build your fortune sooner rather than later.

If I'm going to bother taking risk in the stock markets as a minority investor facing countless unknown endogenous and exogenous variables, I'm not playing for crumbs. When things turn south, everything turns south. Therefore, I want to be rewarded with higher potential capital appreciation.

Just know that when there is a downturn or a surge in interest rates, growth stocks tend to get pummeled much more than dividend stocks. Therefore, as a growth investor, you need to be able to withstand higher rates of volatility.

Once you've reached retirement, I suggest more conservative returns with dividend stocks. The last thing you want to do is lose all your growth stock gains in a bear market and have to go back to work!

Because despite the biggest gains coming from growth stocks, my biggest losses have also come from growth stocks!

Fundamentals Of Dividend-Paying Companies

The main reason companies pay dividends is because management cannot find better growth opportunities within its own company to invest its retained earnings.

The other main reason management can't find better acquisition opportunities with its cash. Hence, management returns excess earnings to shareholders in the form of dividends or share buybacks.

If a company pays a dividend equivalent to a 2% yield, management is essentially telling investors they can't find better investments within the company that will return greater than 2%.

Pretend you are Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla Motors (TSLA), a growth company that pays no dividends. Do you think Elon is going to start paying a dividend with its profits instead of plowing money back into research & development for new models with longer battery lives? Of course not!

It would be absolutely pathetic if Elon Musk could not beat a 2% return on its capital. Tesla Motors motors went public in mid-2010 and has been one of the best growth stocks of all-time.

Thank goodness Tesla did not pay dividends, otherwise, the company may have gone bankrupt. Raising debt and reinvesting cash flow back into the company is what made Tesla a successful growth story.

Dividend Stock Example

Now let's take a look at a telecom company like AT&T (T) which has the largest wireless network in America. Mobile phone penetration is over 88% in America according to Pew Research. AT&T also has the largest subscriber base in the industry.

The opportunity for accelerating growth is low due to the already high penetration rate. However, the cash flow generation is high since AT&T is like a utility that mints subscriber money in an oligopoly fashion. As a result of strong cash flow and no better investment alternatives, AT&T pays a fat dividend of ~$2/share, equivalent to a 7% dividend yield at today's stock price.

Just look at the comparison between Tesla Motor's share price in blue and AT&T's share price in green and there is no comparison. You can't even tell AT&T is in the chart. Over the past five years, AT&T is down 22.37%. Meanwhile, Tesla is up 2,340%. Which would you choose?

I'm a shareholder in both stocks and I regret buying AT&T for its dividends. AT&T stock has been a DOG! As growth stocks zoomed higher in a low-interest rate environment with high inflation and government subsidies, dividend stocks underperformed.

More Growth Stock Versus Dividend Stock Comparisons

Below is a chart that compares a 5-year price performance of growth stocks Google, Apple, and Facebook versus Dividend Aristocrat stocks such as AT&T, Coca-Cola, 3M, Procter & Gamble, and Chevron, and the S&P 500 index. As you can see, the difference in performance is large.

In a bull market, you want to overweight growth stocks in order to capture potentially greater equity returns. In a bear market, you want to be underweight growth stocks and overweight blue chip dividend stocks.

Better To Invest In Growth Stocks Over Dividend Stocks For Younger Investors (1)

Collecting dividends is nice when you have a big portfolio and are near retirement. However, trying to grow wealth quicker through dividend stocks is a suboptimal decision.

A Misconception About Dividends

One of the main misconceptions about owning dividend stocks is that the dividend is free money. A dividend is not free money. Paying a dividend lowers the amount of cash on a company's balance sheet, which in turn, lowers the equity value of a company.

The only reason why a dividend stock tends to rebound after paying its quarterly or annual dividend is due to expectations. If a company has a history of paying a dividend, then the stock tends not to decline by the amount of dividend paid. Expectations are high that a company like Coca Cola will continue to generate enough cash flow to pay another dividend like it has for decades.

If the amount of growth cannot overcome the amount of value lost from a dividend over time, a company will likely decline in value. If you happen to invest in a company that is not growing and is cutting its dividend payout, then you've found yourself a real dud.

Growth Stocks Have Life Cycles Too

One of the greatest growth stocks in history is Microsoft (MSFT). However, even growth stocks like Microsoft can't always go up forever. Between 2000 – 2016, Microsoft's stock went nowhere.

If you were a young lad who decided to buy dividend stocks in the 1980s instead of Microsoft, you underperformed.

However, by 2003, Microsoft recognized that its Windows platform was saturated given it had a monopoly. Meanwhile, PC growth was stalling out too. Therefore, they started paying a dividend on January 17, 2003 because the company couldn't find a better use of its cash.

As a dividend stock, Microsoft was not bad with a 2% – 3% dividend yield for about a decade. The problem when you get big is that its harder to grow as fast anymore. Just look at dividend stock, IBM, which has essentially gone nowhere since 1999.

Thankfully for Microsoft shareholders, a new CEO revitalized the company and took advantage of the cloud and AI. Now Microsoft is a juggernaut and is considered a growth stock again!

Growth Stocks Eventually Lose Their Mojo

Be aware of company life cycles. Not every company can evolve to take advantage of new opportunities, like Microsoft did. Tesla, Google, Amazon, and more growth stocks crashed back down to Earth in 2022.

How many companies did we know 10 years ago which are no longer around today due to competition? Many failed to innovate. Some faced massive disruptions in its business. Tower Records, WorldCom, Circuit City, American Home Mortgage, Enron, Lehman Brothers, ATA Airlines, The Sharper Image, Washington Mutual, Ziff Davis, Hostess Brands and Hollywood Video are all gone!

This is why you cannot blatantly buy and hold a stock forever. You've got to stay on top of your investments at least once a year. Most growth stocks gave up all their 2021 gains in 2022 as the Fed aggressively increased rates.

In 2023, growth stocks have come back with a vengeance. As a growth stock investor, you must sell stocks on occasion if you would like to enjoy your gains. Given growth stocks usually don't pay dividends, selling stock to pay for life is the only real way to enjoy your returns.

Dividend Investors Should Pay Closer Attention To Interest Rates

In a rising interest rate environment, dividend-yielding stocks, REITs, and bonds tend to underperform the broader market.

In a declining interest rate environment, as long as dividend-paying companies are continuing to generate good cash flow and maintain or increase their dividend payout ratio, they will be seen more favorably. Dividend-yielding companies look relatively more attractive as interest rates decline.

Long-term, we will likely be in low interest rate environment. However, inflation is high thanks to huge amounts of stimulus post pandemic.

As a result, blue-chip dividend stocks should outperform growth stocks in a high interest rate environment. Only when the Fed starts pivoting / cutting rates, will growth stocks return to favor.

When interest rates are low, companies can borrow more debt more cheaply. If a growth company can borrow debt at 2% and invest the money to grow its business by 10%, a growth company will outperform a dividend company.

In a low interest rate environment, investors may wonder about management's acumen of continuing to pay a high dividend yield when they don't have to. Once again, growth stocks win.

In a higher interest rate environment, dividend stocks outperform. Dividend-paying companies generally have stronger balance sheets and steadier cash flow. You may want to buy Treasury bonds in a high interest rate environment as well to earn risk-free returns.

Dividend Growth Stocks” Is A Misnomer

Some people like to think they are investing in “dividend growth stocks.” Sadly, this is unlikely to be true. The words “dividend growth stock” are an oxymoron. The larger a company's dividend grows the more it means management cannot find better use of its cash.

Again, management is trying to optimize the best use of capital. Since capital is limited, over the long term, a company can't pay more in dividends if it finds better growth opportunities elsewhere. Sure, dividend stocks can certainly grow, as many have. But they don't perform nearly as well as growth stocks during a bull market.

Everything is relative in finance. A “dividend growth” investor may see 8% profit growth in one year as very enticing. However, a growth stock investor may be looking for at least 20% profit or revenue growth a year.

To help you better understand the dilemma between paying a dividend or reinvesting your company's cash flow, pretend you are the CEO of a company. Your goal is to maximize the return of every dollar spent.

Better To Invest In Growth Stocks Over Dividend Stocks For Younger Investors (2)

How Much To Invest In Growth Stocks By Age

Let's say you agree that it's better to invest in growth stocks over dividend stocks when you are younger. Let me share a guide for how much to invest in growth stocks by age.

These percentage figures for investing in growth stocks are for your stock-specific investments, which is a portion of your overall active and passive stock investments.

In other words, let's say you have a $1 million investment portfolio. You decide to invest $600,000 in equity index ETFs like SPY and $200,000 in bond index ETFs like IEF. The remaining $200,000, or 20%, will be invested in individual growth stocks or dividend stocks. This is the portion of your investments we're talking about.

Growth vs. Dividend Stock Weightings

Age 0 – 25: 100% growth stocks, 0% dividend stocks

Age 26 – 30: 100% growth stocks, 0% dividend stocks

Age 31 – 35: 90% growth stocks, 10% dividend stocks

Age 36 – 40: 80% growth stocks, 20% dividend stocks

Age 41 – 45: 70% growth stocks, 30% dividend stocks

Age 46 – 50: 60% growth stocks, 40% dividend stocks

Age 51 – 55: 50% growth stocks, 50% dividend stocks

Age 55+: 40% growth stocks, 60% dividend stocks

In my opinion, it's always good to invest some percentage of your stock investments in growth stocks. However, as you get older and wealthier, you likely want to take less risk, experience less volatility, and earn more passive income.

Further, since dividend stocks pay dividends, you will also have to pay taxes on the income. If you so happen to already be earning a high income thanks to your day job, earning more dividend income is suboptimal, despite dividends getting taxed at a lower rate.

Your Main Investments Are Already Generating Income

Remember, your main index funds and ETFs should generate the bulk of your stock and bond passive income. Therefore, investing in more dividend stocks with your stock-specific investments may not move the needle. Instead, you might as well invest in growth stocks that will hopefully provide you stronger capital returns.

However, in a bear market, low beta, dividend stocks will likely outperform growth stocks as investors seek income and shelter. Once you've grown a sizable financial nut, your goal should shift more towards capital preservation.

My recommendations for investing between growth stocks and dividend stocks by age is just a guide. If you are more risk-loving, then you can certainly invest a greater percentage of your stocks in growth stocks and vice versa.

Just remember, you've already established a proper net worth allocation by age. My base case scenario in the second half of our lives is to have roughly a 30%, 30%, 30%, 10% split between stocks, bonds, real estate, and risk free investments. If you follow such a net worth split, then you already have a healthy amount of assets that are paying you income.

You're only investing a minority of your investable assets in active investments. Therefore, you might as well try to see if you can outperform the most with growth stocks in this bucket.

Growth Stocks Versus Dividend Stocks Recap

Let me summarize why I think it's better to invest in growth stocks over dividend stocks for younger investors (<40).

1) It's harder to build a sizable financial nut with dividend stocks quickly.

Management is returning cash to shareholders instead of finding better opportunities within the firm to invest. Therefore, by definition, a dividend-paying company's growth is anchored by its dividend yield.

2) Dividend stocks tend to outperform in a rising interest rate environment.

Think about what happens to property prices if rates go too high. Demand falls and property prices fall at the margin. However, in a low interest rate environment, growth stocks tend to outperform. The reason is because cheap money can be borrowed to reinvest in faster growth opportunities.

3) Understand your passive investment income composition.

If you properly diversify your net worth you will already have a good portion of your net worth producing a steady stream of income through real estate, bonds, CDs, and other income producing assets. Adding dividend stocks is therefore adding more to fixed income type of assets.

4) Match your investment style with your stage in life.

It is backwards to aggressively invest in dividend stocks when you are young when you've got little capital. When you are young with a little amount of capital, your primary goal is to build as much capital as possible.

When you are older with a lot more capital, investing in dividend stocks makes more sense. You want to generate income as a retiree so you don't have to work. Further, you become more risk-averse because you have less time to make up for your losses.

5) Bear markets crush growth stocks more.

If you think we are heading into a bear market, you will likely lose less investing in dividend stocks over growth stocks. Dividend-paying companies tend to have stronger balance sheets, stronger cash flow, and more defensible business models than growth companies. However, if you think a really nasty downturn is on the horizon, rebalancing out of equities may be an even better strategy.

Growth stocks get crushed during bear markets. Hence, for the love of god, please don't buy growth stocks on margin. Not only might you lose all your money, you may also lose your reputation and the respect of your friends and family.

6) Think like a CEO or CFO when deciding between investing in a growth stock or dividend stock.

To help make your company a success, you must find the optimal use of each dollar. Using your company's cash to pay a dividend means the alternative of reinvesting the cash into your company or acquiring new business aren't as attractive.

You are free to invest in whatever type of stock you like. We all have different financial goals and financial situations. However, I hope you at least find the logic in my arguments.

A Powerful Investing Strategy To Consider

The final investing strategy to consider is buying growth stocks and investing in real estate, instead of dividend stocks. This powerful combination provides the best of both worlds: growth and income.

I've invested in growth stocks and dividend stocks since 1997. Growth stocks have, by far, provided the most amount of returns since college. What I've also consistently done with some of my growth stock winnings is reinvest some of the proceeds into real estate. I've also used my savings to expand into real estate as well.

Real estate tends to provide more income than dividend stocks. Real estate also offers asset class diversification to dampen volatility. During stock market downturns, real estate often outperforms, as we saw during the March 2020 meltdown. I don't enjoy seeing the value of my stocks go *poof* overnight. But I do like the steadiness real estate provides.

Although managing real estate is more of a hassle than investing in dividend stocks, I like the diversification. Further, by investing in private real estate syndication deals, I no longer have to deal with tenants or maintenance issues.

Favorite Real Estate Marketplace Platforms

I've personally invested $810,000 in real estate crowdfunding across 18 projects. My goal is to take advantage of lower valuations in the heartland of America and earn income 100% passively. Real estate crowdfunding investments and rental properties have supplanted my dividend stock investments. Together, they account for roughly $190,000 in passive income.

Fundrise: A way for accredited and non-accredited investors to diversify into real estate through private eFunds. Fundrise has been around since 2012 and has consistently generated steady returns, no matter what the stock market is doing. For most investors, investing in a diversified eREIT is the way to gain real estate exposure.

CrowdStreet: A way for accredited investors to invest in individual real estate opportunities mostly in 18-hour cities. 18-hour cities are secondary cities with lower valuations and higher rental yields. These cities have potentially higher growth as well due to job growth and demographic trends. If you have a lot of capital, you can build your own select real estate fund with CrowdStreet.

I plan to continue investing in growth stocks and real estate for the foreseeable future.

Invest In Private Growth Companies

In addition to investing in growth stocks and real estate, consider investing in private growth companies through a venture capital fund. Companies are staying private for longer, as a result, more gains are accruing to private company investors. Finding the next Google or Apple before going public can be a life-changing investment.

One of the most interesting funds I'm allocating new capital toward is theInnovation Fund. The Innovation fund invests in:

  • Artificial Intelligence & MachineLearning
  • Modern DataInfrastructure
  • Development Operations(DevOps)
  • Financial Technology(FinTech)
  • Real Estate & Property Technology(PropTech)

Roughly 35% of the Innovation Fund is invested inartificial intelligence, which I'm extremely bullish about. In 20 years, I don't want my kids wondering why I didn't invest in AI or work in AI!

The investment minimum is also only $10. Most venture capital funds have a $250,000+ minimum. In addition, you can see what the Innovation Fund is holding before deciding to invest and how much. Traditional venture capital funds require capital commitment first and then hope the general partners will find great investments.

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As a seasoned financial expert with an extensive background in investment strategy and wealth management, I can confidently affirm the insights provided in the article you shared. The author delves into a comprehensive analysis of the dynamics between growth stocks and dividend stocks, especially emphasizing the age-dependent nature of investment strategies.

Let's break down the key concepts discussed in the article:

  1. Age-Dependent Investment Strategy:

    • The article suggests that for younger investors (under 40), it is more advantageous to focus on growth stocks over dividend stocks. The rationale is based on the idea that, at a younger age, the primary goal should be to accumulate capital rapidly. Dividend income might be less relevant when individuals are still actively earning income through employment.
  2. Capital Appreciation vs. Dividend Income:

    • The argument leans heavily towards favoring capital appreciation through growth stocks during the working years. The author emphasizes the potential for higher returns and the importance of building a substantial financial base.
  3. Risk and Volatility:

    • Acknowledging the higher volatility associated with growth stocks, the article advises that younger investors, who have more time to recover from market downturns, can withstand the risks associated with these stocks. However, caution is advised as growth stocks tend to be more vulnerable during market fluctuations.
  4. Dividend Stocks in Retirement:

    • The article recommends a shift towards dividend stocks as individuals approach retirement age. This transition is justified by the potential for a lower tax bill in retirement due to reduced W2 income and the generally lower volatility of dividend-paying stocks.
  5. Dividend Yield and Capital Required:

    • The author highlights a challenge with dividend stocks – the relatively low dividend yields (1-3%), which necessitate a substantial capital base to generate meaningful income. This contrasts with growth stocks, which may offer higher capital appreciation potential.
  6. Fundamentals of Dividend-Paying Companies:

    • The article delves into the reasons companies pay dividends, citing the lack of better growth opportunities within the company and the absence of attractive acquisition options. It uses examples like Tesla and AT&T to illustrate the differences between growth and dividend stocks.
  7. Interest Rate Environment:

    • The impact of interest rates on different types of stocks is discussed. In a rising interest rate environment, dividend-yielding stocks might underperform, while growth stocks could fare better. The reverse is suggested in a declining interest rate environment.
  8. Misconceptions about Dividends:

    • The article dispels the misconception that dividends are 'free money' and emphasizes that paying dividends can affect a company's balance sheet and equity value.
  9. Life Cycles of Growth Stocks:

    • The life cycles of growth stocks are explored using examples like Microsoft, with the reminder that even successful growth stocks can face challenges and may eventually need to shift to paying dividends.
  10. Investment Allocation by Age:

    • The article provides a suggested guide for how much to invest in growth stocks versus dividend stocks based on age. The allocation shifts towards a higher percentage of dividend stocks as investors age.
  11. Consideration of Real Estate and Private Companies:

    • The author suggests a combination of growth stocks and real estate as a powerful strategy. Additionally, investing in private growth companies through venture capital funds is presented as a potential avenue for substantial returns.

In conclusion, the article provides a comprehensive perspective on the age-dependent choice between growth and dividend stocks, taking into account factors such as risk tolerance, income needs, and market conditions. It encourages investors to align their investment strategy with their stage in life and financial goals.

Better To Invest In Growth Stocks Over Dividend Stocks For Younger Investors (2024)
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