Tag: Dividend Investing

Dividend strategies, IDCW, passive income

🏛️💰 Building a Recession, War & AI‑Proof Indian Stock Portfolio: A 20‑Year Blueprint with 21 Stocks 🇮🇳🏛️💰 Building a Recession, War & AI‑Proof Indian Stock Portfolio: A 20‑Year Blueprint with 21 Stocks 🇮🇳

The ₹5 Crore Question Every Indian Investor Must Answer What if a portfolio could survive three recessions, a geopolitical shock or two, and a technology revolution—while still paying dividends year

Decoding Corporate Actions: How Buybacks, Bonus Issues, and Splits Impact Your Portfolio Returns 📊Decoding Corporate Actions: How Buybacks, Bonus Issues, and Splits Impact Your Portfolio Returns 📊

Hook:Corporate actions like buybacks, bonus issues, and stock splits often trigger excitement—or confusion—among retail investors. Yet most don’t understand what these actions truly mean for their wealth, tax obligations, or

📊 The Two True Drivers of Stock Market Returns: Why Earnings and Dividends Beat Market Noise Every Time 💰📊 The Two True Drivers of Stock Market Returns: Why Earnings and Dividends Beat Market Noise Every Time 💰

Picture this: You check your portfolio. Your stock is up 35% this year. Friends congratulate you on “catching the rally.” But here’s the uncomfortable truth most investors miss—if that 35%

💰 Dividend & Buyback Strategies in India: Tax-Efficiency, Special Dividends, Tender-Route Mechanics & Investor Profile Mapping 📊💰 Dividend & Buyback Strategies in India: Tax-Efficiency, Special Dividends, Tender-Route Mechanics & Investor Profile Mapping 📊

When Rajesh, a 45-year-old tech entrepreneur in the 30% tax bracket, received ₹8 lakh in dividends from his equity portfolio in FY25, he celebrated the passive income—until tax time arrived.

💰📊 Dividend Yield vs Buyback Yield vs Total Shareholder Yield: The Complete Shareholder Returns Guide for Income Investors💰📊 Dividend Yield vs Buyback Yield vs Total Shareholder Yield: The Complete Shareholder Returns Guide for Income Investors

Here’s what 73% of Indian income investors miss: Two companies might both return ₹100 crore to shareholders annually, but Company A distributes everything as dividends (taxed at 30% slab rate