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Defining Yield on Cost (The YOC!)

This post will be an investing lesson regarding a certain investing topic that dividend investors will occasionally use when they discuss performance and metrics.  It is similar to your yield and is a huge proponent for how long you hold onto an investment, the activities that happen within that investment, as well as the pros and cons of measuring such a metric.  The topic that I’d like to discuss today is the Yield on Cost or, as I like to call it – The YOC!  And no… this is not the same thing as in the NFL or YAC (Yards after catch), close though!  Let’s talk about The YOC!

The YOC!

Yield on Cost or The YOC, as we’ll call it, is an investing metric that, more specifically, dividend investors use when talking about a stock that they own.  The YOC tracks your yield on the initial cost of your investment.  Want an example?  Sure, let’s do it.

Say you buy Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), as I recently have done, and you spent $1,000 on the investment for 10 shares at $100 per share.  The initial yield and initial YOC was $2.80 per share or 2.80% overall.  JNJ, though, announced a dividend increase to $3.00 per share.  The stock price jumps from $100 to $110 per share and your investment is now worth $1,100.  Your current yield at $30 in dividends per year over $1,100 is 2.72%.  However, your YOC is calculated differently.  Your cost didn’t change, but the dividend did.  You now receive $30 on the initial cost of $1,000, which your YOC goes from 2.80% to 3.00%.

Do you see that change/track measurement there?  Over time as a dividend growth/income investor – this is the traditional path that one would see.

What Impacts The YOC?

There are a few items that impact your yield on cost that I will list out below.  Fairly simple, but here we go:

Why care about The YOC?

This appears to be the real debate or pressure.  Why do you care about the Yield on Cost or YOC?  This is why I care about the YOC:

Conclusion

Your YOC is not by any means an important metric to look at, but a tool to see what trend a stock or portfolio is or has been heading.  It can be fun to monitor and is a simple field to calculate within excel.  There are a lot of positives to looking at it, I feel, in helping you make your decision to currently hold, sell or buy more of a stock.  There are better metrics to look at, easily, such as our stock screener tool, the 5 year dividend yield comparison and even the share buy back figure – to see performance, valuations and directions of where a stock could be heading.

How many of you monitor the yield on cost?  Do you find it to be an annoying column in your spreadsheet?  Have you had it, then disposed of the tool?  Any feedback, thoughts, suggestions or comments are appreciated!  Thanks everyone, talk soon.

-Lanny

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