A dividend is just a company sending you cash. That’s fine. The problem starts when “high yield” becomes the only filter. When an investor screens for 6%, 8%, 10% payouts and assumes that’s the same thing as a “good investment.”
It isn’t. And the gap between those two ideas is where a lot of people quietly lose money.
This post is me thinking out loud about why I personally don’t optimize for dividends, what the actual trade-offs are, and what I do instead. If you read it and decide dividend investing is still right for you, then go ahead. I just want you to make that choice with both eyes open.
The One Mistake That Hides Behind Everything #
People treat dividend yield and return on investment as if they were the same number. They’re not.
The return on a stock is made of two pieces:
flowchart TD
A[Total Return] --> B[Capital Appreciation
price goes up]
A --> C[Dividend Yield
cash paid out]
B --> D[Compounds inside
the business]
C --> E[Cash in your hand
or reinvested]
If a stock pays a 4% dividend and the share price drops 4% on the ex-dividend date, your total return that day is zero. The company didn’t manufacture wealth out of thin air. It just moved value from one pocket (share price) to another pocket (your cash account). And in many jurisdictions, that move triggers tax along the way.
That’s the lens I want you to keep in mind for the rest of this post. Total return is the real number. Everything else is bookkeeping.
Before you buy something for the dividend, ask yourself: “Would I still want this if it paid zero and the price grew at the same total rate?” If the answer is no, you’re not investing. You are paying a premium for cash flow.
Six Reasons I Personally Skip the Dividend Chase #
I’ve consolidated the classic eight reasons into six that I actually believe matter the most. The other two (“preference” and “no guarantee”) are true but trivial. They apply to literally every investment.
1. Dividends Are Not Free Money #
This is the one most people get wrong. A dividend isn’t a bonus. It’s your money being transferred from the company’s balance sheet to yours. On payday, the share price drops by roughly the dividend amount. You haven’t been given anything. You have been handed a slice of what you already owned, in cash form.
If the company could have reinvested that cash at a high rate of return, you may have just received the worst outcome: paying tax to receive money the business could have grown for you.
2. They Can Cap Your Total Return #
The best long-term performers in market history such as Amazon, Apple, Berkshire Hathaway, Microsoft for most of its growth phase, paid little or no dividend for years. They retained earnings and compounded inside the business.
A 5% dividend yield sounds nice. But if it comes with 1% earnings growth, you’re earning 6% total. A no-dividend growth stock compounding at 11% is way better over a decade. Yield is a number you can see. Compounding is a number you have to imagine. Most people choose the one they can see.
3. They Create a Tax Drag You Didn’t Ask For #
Tax rules vary wildly by country, but the principle is universal: a dividend is usually a taxable event the moment it lands. Capital appreciation isn’t taxed until you sell.
That means a portfolio of growth stocks lets you defer tax for years, even decades, while compounding pre-tax. A high-yield portfolio forces you to pay every quarter. Even if the rate is identical, paying later beats paying now.
I own Swiss and US Stocks. My dividend payments are always gross minus the withholding tax. Switzerlands withholding tax is 35% and US withholding tax is 30%. If you live abroad like myself, you can claim back some of the withholding tax, but that comes at a huge hassle. Lot’s of paperwork and some upfront costs.
4. They’re a Forced Withdrawal You Don’t Control #
When you own a growth stock, you decide when to take money out. You can sell a portion when you need cash, or never.
When you own a dividend stock, the company decides for you. They pay out on their schedule, in their amounts, whether or not you wanted the cash. If you’re still in the accumulation phase and you reinvest the dividend, you’ve just done a manual round-trip. Receive cash, pay tax (maybe), buy shares back.
5. They Push You Toward a Less Diversified Portfolio #
Screen the market for high yield and you end up in the same three sectors every time: utilities, financials, energy, sometimes REITs and telcos. That’s not a diversified portfolio.
When those sectors hit a bad cycle such as rates rise, oil collapses, banks get squeezed, your “safe” income portfolio falls 30%.
6. The Psychological Win Disguises a Financial Loss #
This one is the most personal. Getting a dividend feels great. Cash hits the account, you see the number and your brain registers it as a win. That feeling is real. But it’s only a feeling, not a return.
Some investors hold onto declining dividend stocks far past the point where the math made sense, simply because the quarterly payout felt like proof the position was working. It wasn’t working. The payout was just emotionally louder than the unrealized loss on the share price. I’ve experienced it myself.
What I Actually Do Instead #
Here’s how I structure my own approach:
- Total return is the only number that matters. I look at “how much will this position be worth in ten years, including everything?”
- I let growth compound where it makes sense. A position that retains earnings well and reinvests them at a high return is doing my job for me. I don’t need it to send me cash.
- I generate my income from options, not yield. Selling defined-risk options premium gives me cash flow that I control, with defined risk, on positions I already wanted to own. That’s a different game than waiting for a board to declare a dividend. This is why I trade options for income rather than buy yield.
- When I do own dividend payers, it’s because the underlying business is great, not because the yield is high. The dividend is the side-effect.
Who Should Actually Lean Into Dividends #
I don’t want to be one-sided. There are real scenarios where a dividend-heavy approach makes sense:
- You’re in or near retirement and you want predictable cash flow without the psychological pressure of selling shares in a down market.
- You live in a jurisdiction with very favourable dividend taxation
- You know yourself well enough to admit you’ll panic-sell growth stocks in a 40% drawdown but you’ll happily hold a utility paying you 5% through the same drop.
If you’re in any of those buckets, dividend investing isn’t a mistake. It’s the right tool for your situation.
The Bottom Line #
I’m not anti-dividend. I’m anti-chase.
The mistake isn’t owning companies that pay you cash. The mistake is letting “yield” become a shortcut that bypasses every other question worth asking: Is this a good business? Am I diversified? Am I optimizing for total return or for the feeling of being paid? Is there a better way to generate the cash flow I actually want?
For me, the answer to that last question is yes. I would rather build income on my own terms, with options I control, on businesses I’d own anyway. For you, it might be different. That’s fine. But think about it.