Matthew 26:14
New Member
Dividend Yield is the dividend paid by the company over the last year to shareholders divided by the current share price.
Eg. If the share price is $1 and the company paid 10c in dividends over the last year, it would be 0.10/1.0 = 10%.
So 10% would be dividend yield but it is often written a decimal, such as 10.0. So 7.8 dividend yield would be 7.8% and so on.
The purpose of this dividend yield is somewhat similar to interest in a bank, it shows the cash return or "interest" you would receive as a shareholder from the company.
Eg. If the share price is $1 and the company paid 10c in dividends over the last year, it would be 0.10/1.0 = 10%.
So 10% would be dividend yield but it is often written a decimal, such as 10.0. So 7.8 dividend yield would be 7.8% and so on.
The purpose of this dividend yield is somewhat similar to interest in a bank, it shows the cash return or "interest" you would receive as a shareholder from the company.