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Ted Roman, a financial planner in San Diego for the past 30 years, has never seen his clients sour on U.S. stocks for so long. "There's a definite resistance to investing in the market now," he says. "It's like they are all suffering from some form of post-traumatic stress syndrome." The days following the 1987 market crash were easy compared with this, he says. Then, it took only a year and eight months for investors to recover, when you include dividends. Now, his clients are often saddled with both stock losses and real estate that isn't worth what it once was. Investors who hold on to domestic stocks may need to relearn how to gauge their success. For the past 25 years, investors were trained to consider rising stock prices the measure of a good investment. But analysts say dividends, once thought to be appropriate only for retirees counting on income, will now account for the majority of investor return. Just look at Johnson & Johnson. Based on price alone, the stock is up 4.8 percent over the last year. But had a stockholder reinvested all of the company's dividends, his total return would have been 8.4 percent. The company's 3.4 percent dividend yield -- a ratio that tells investors how much a company pays out in dividends relative to its share price
-- is currently higher than the 10-year Treasury bond, whose main attraction to most investors is its ability to provide income. That's more like how the stock market functioned before the long bull market of the 1980s and 1990s, says Jim Reid, a strategist with Deutsche Bank in London. Until 1958, the dividend yield of the stock market was greater than the yield from T-bonds, he notes. Exxon Mobil, Verizon Communications and PepsiCo are among the more than 100 large companies whose stocks now pay a greater dividend yield than their average bond yields, Reid noted in a recent research report. Perhaps because they don't come with the chance to brag about buying a stock like Netflix at $17 a share and watching it soar to $162, plain-vanilla dividend stocks aren't that exciting for most investors. So while the market may continue to chug on below its previous highs, some wallflowers may miss out on a stealthier form of gains. It may take a few months of outsized jumps in the prices of U.S. stocks for the lay investor to once again feel like he's missing out on something. "There's nothing like an 11 percent return in one month to turn people around," says Bob Browne, the chief investment officer at Northern Trust. But by that time, the quick, exciting gains may be gone.
[Associated
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