Trade Alert Note: A strong market rebound of over 6% making a new high in over 6 weeks is a signal that indicates to Get-Back-in-Early without waiting
until month-end. It indicates a renewed bull market appeaars to have taken hold and neutralizes any other conflicting StormGuard-Armor triggers.
Scott Juds
Dividend Stocks Momentum Screener
Best U.S. Dividend Paying Stocks List for Investment Strategies
Dividend
Stock Screening SectorSurfer Style:
A "Buy List" is not directly generated
by this stock screener. Rather, it qualifies stocks to participate as one of
the dozen stocks in a SectorSurfer Strategy.
The Strategy's algorithm performs the final comparative
analysis to determine which one, and only one, of them
to own next month. Your job is to provide the algorithm
with excellent stock selection alternatives.
This stock screener targets dividend paying stocks with > 1% annual dividend
yield. Two check boxes are provided below
to change the focus to include/exclude stocks with > 1%
in annual dividend yield or > $20M/day trading volume.
The Stk. Rank
column in the table below is a composite measure of
trend quality, 3-yr relative price energy, and
relative volatility. Stk. Rank should be your primary dividend paying
stock screening method for SectorSurfer Strategies, although additional technical
analysis columns are provided to
help you select top stocks according to your personal
tastes — such as a particular P/E Ratio, or a minimum dividend yield. Please also
review this material:
Stocks vs. Sectors & Asset Classes.
How to
Select Top Dividend Stocks for Your Investment Strategies:
1) Do
not focus on performance measures that are poorly correlated to near term price performance. P/E
Ratio, and daily volume don't foretell next
month's returns.
Use
Stk. Rank as your primary stock screening method.
2)Secondarily, use the DivYield
column as your dividend screener. Top dividend stocks with a poor
Stk. Rank
are less likely to produce the
capital gains you expect when selling. A dividend
screener should be used only for secondary qualification.
3) Although Stk. Rank
is already adjusted for relative volatility, which is a
measure of the variability in results to expect,
you may sleep
better at night selecting dividend paying stocks with
lower volatility.
4)
Finally,
select a set of
stocks that aren't clones of one another
to increase the likelihood that at least one will be
doing well when the others are not.
This is
not a stock buy-list. It's a ranking of stocks
likely qualified to be in a Strategy. See above.
Sorting ... Please Wait...
Dividend Stock Screener
(See Parameter Definitions Below Table)
Loading Data ... Please Wait... Chrome & FireFox are Fast, I.E. can be Quite Slow.
Stk. Rank
A composite indicator that includes the Trend Quality
Indicator, the 3-Yr Energy Indicator and other
considerations, with the objective of ranking the
"likely future value" of including a stock in a
SectorSurfer Strategy.
It does not directly indicate which stocks are hot to
buy today, but rather indicates which stocks will likely
make excellent candidates for SectorSurfer's selection
algorithm. Make this your primary stock screening
parameter. Please
also view this
Freshly Fit for Duty comment.
Trend
Quality
A measure of the probability that a trend will continue
from one month to the next. It is calculated over the
most recent five years as the ratio of the sum of all
actual monthly returns during months that SectorSurfer's trend indicator
predicted would be positive, divided by the sum of all
of the positive return amounts predicted. Some stocks
inherently have poor trend quality because they are
thinly traded or have small capitalization and are
easily buffeted by traders responding to economic,
sector, or competitor headlines. Knowing whether a trend
indication has meaning or is more likely irrelevant
market noise is important to improving the batting
average in stock selection. An example of a nice steady
trend characteristic is Southern Company (SO), while
others, such asGuess (GES), are fraught with
regular sharp trend reversals that negate signal
reliability.
3-Yr Excess
The relative recent price strength as measured by the cumulative returns in excess of the S&P 500
over the past three years. Calculations are based on the
daily sum of the positive differences in the
one-month-double-smoothed daily returns of each.
Companies that have outperformed the S&P500 index in
recent periods have likely done so for a reason, and are
more likely to do so again in the future. While many
companies do well during an initial growth phase, most later go dormant.
However, some do have additional growth
phases. For example, while DELL was a rising star in the
late 90s, it has since been dormant for over a decade
and serves no purpose in a current SectorSurfer Stock
Strategy. See example DELL chart.
Relative Volatility The ratio of the stock's daily price
volatility to the S&P500's daily price volatility, where
volatility is measured by the standard deviation of the
percentage change in daily price during the past three
years. The daily volatility of the S&P500 typically runs
about 1.2%. A stock with 2.5 times the daily volatility
will show a value of 2.5 in the table. Volatility is a
measure of market noise that reduces reliability of the
trend signal. The higher the
volatility, the more likely an erroneous head-fake
signal will be generated — and as you know, having a
reliable handoff of the baton in a relay race is
critical. A relative volatility rating of about 1.5 or less is
recommended.
Signature Ribbon The Ribbon's three colored bars provide a visual means to
help identify stocks of different character —
meaning stocks that have poorly correlated price
movements that would be likely to play well together in
a SectorSurfer Strategy as
outlined here.
The annotated chart to the right demonstrates how to
interpret the Signature Ribbon's three colored bars.
Along the top of the chart is a portion of the screener
row for VIAB showing its green-black-blue ribbons on the
right side. The three ribbons represent the returns from
each of the prior three years. Each year is further
broken down into thirds, represented by the three
primary colors red, green, and blue, which are combined
together to make one stripe. The color triangle below
shows how the various colors combine. For example, blue
plus red makes purple, red plus green makes yellow, and
all of them together create white. Red represents
performance during the first part of the year, green
during the middle, and blue the end. Performance is
measured relative to the S&P500 during the same
interval.
The first bar in the Signature Ribbon is bright green,
indicating that the middle of the first year performed
much better than the S&P500, but there was no
contribution during the first (red) or last (blue)
portions of the year. During the second year, VIAB
performs about the same as the S&P500, so neither red,
green, nor blue have contributions, leaving the second
ribbon black. In the final year, VIAB performs about as
well as the S&P500 during the start of the year, so no
contribution to red, but performance is much better than
the S&P500 during the middle and end portions of the
year, contributing both green and blue to produce the
aqua colored third bar in the Signature Ribbon.
Use the Signature Ribbon as an quick guide for
identifying uncorrelated candidates for your Strategy,
but always be sure to examine the chart and other
performance metrics of each before adding it as a
participating member of your Strategy.
1-Yr Price Range
The current price as a percentage of the
range between the 52-week high and the 52-week low. For
example, if the current price is $80, the 52-week high
was $100 and the 52-weeek low was $50 then the value =
($80 - $50) / ($100 - $50) = 60%. At a glance you will
know if you are going to be bottom fishing or investing
in something powering on to new highs.
Volume
in
$M/day
The daily traded volume of shares in millions of
dollars. Thinly traded stocks are more likely to have
poor trend characteristics and are more likely to have
significant bid-ask spreads that degrade returns in
actual trades. A checkbox is provided above to include
or exclude stocks trading under $20 million per day.
Note that stocks trading at about this level may, or may
not, make this threshold from day-to-day because of its
daily fluctuation in trading volume.
Dividend
The annualized amount paid to shareholders by the
company as a percent of share price. In the absence of
any capital gains, the dividend yield is the return on
investment for a stock. However, in any trading
system, eventually the stock is sold, capital gains come
to roost, and the dividends taken along the way simply
amount to selling a portion of the investment each time
a dividend is distributed. However, stock prices used
for charting and analysis are always dividend adjusted
so that any analysis of the stock's price is as if the
dividends were reinvested in more shares. Thus,
dividends do not represent any additional return not
already represented in the adjusted price history. While
some believe that the mere fact a company is paying a
dividend is an indication of company maturity and
prudent management, others would argue it signals the
doldrums as management admits it no longer can think of
better uses for surplus cash in product and market
development. A checkbox is provided above to include or
exclude stocks under 1% annual dividend yield.
P/E
Ratio
The ratio of a company's current share price
to its per-share earnings. For example, if a
company is currently trading at $43 a share and earnings
over the past 12 months were $1.95 per share, the P/E
ratio for the stock would be $43/$1.95 = 22.1. The P/E
Ratio is also known as "price multiple" or "earnings
multiple." Newly listed companies are often in a serious
product and market development phase and have little to
no net earnings, but always project great earnings down the
road. An interesting contrast is exemplified by the difference between
giants
AAPL and AMZN with similar stock trajectories, but which (in 2012) have P/Es of 15 and
295 respectively. Even though AMZN has been
around for well over 15 years, the company continues to
invest heavily in growth, leaving profits for later —
and investors believe and reward that story. While P/E
is interesting, apparently it isn't a very good
indicator of price appreciation trend.
Spreadsheet Download
The link just above-right of the table enables downloading
current data in the .csv
spreadsheet file format. The file name contains both the
current month and year so that the data from the last
day of each month remains available on the server and
accessible for your further experimentation. You can
retrieve any of the files by using the following URL web
address format:
https://www.sumgrowth.com/Data/SGSETFScreener-mm-yyyy.csv
where mm and yyyy are replaced with the current month
and year respectively. The first ETF spreadsheet is for
07-2013, and the first stocks spreadsheet is for
06-2012.
Note: The last nine columns of the spreadsheet contain
the Signature Ribbon data for the nine four-month
periods prior to the date of the spreadsheet in the
order of oldest to most recent, with values from 0.00 to
9.99. The value is proportional to the relative amount
by which its performance exceeds the performance of the
S&P500 during the period (or that of a money market fund
if the S&P500 is trending negatively). There are
no negative values because SectorSurfer's algorithm is
inherently designed to ignore potentially negative
contributors, thus rendering them of zero value.
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Portfolio Theory, and SumGrowth, are all trademarks of
SumGrowth, Inc. of Seattle WA 98125. Copyright 2010-2024 SumGrowth,
Inc. All Rights Reserved.
SumGrowth, Inc. is not a
registered investment
advisor and does not provide professional financial
investment advice specific to your life situation. SectorSurfer
is solely an algorithmic strategy analysis tool that produces
trade signals according to the set of funds you provide to it
for analysis. Strategy performance
is hypothetical, based on trading at the market close of
trade dates, and does not include associated trading fees or
subscription fees. Past performance is no guarantee of future
performance. Losses can and will occur over time as the market's
character reacts to world events. SectorSurfer may only be used for
your personal analysis and education purposes.
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