In trading on Friday, shares of MMM were yielding above the 6% mark based on its quarterly dividend (annualized to $6), with the stock changing hands as low as $99.58 on the day. Dividends are particularly important for investors to consider, because historically speaking dividends have provided a considerable share of the stock market’s total return. To illustrate, suppose for example you purchased shares of the S&P 500 ETF back on 12/31/1999 — you would have paid $146.88 per share. Fast forward to 12/31/2012 and each share was worth $142.41 on that date, a decrease of $4.67/share over all those years. But now consider that you collected a whopping $25.98 per share in dividends over the same period, for a positive total return of 23.36%. Even with dividends reinvested, that only amounts to an average annual total return of about 1.6%; so by comparison collecting a yield above 6% would appear considerably attractive if that yield is sustainable. MMM is an S&P 500 company, giving it special status as one of the large-cap companies making up the S&P 500 Index.
Start slideshow: 10 Stocks Where Yields Got More Juicy »
Support authors and subscribe to content
This is premium stuff. Subscribe to read the entire article.