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Dividends Are Making Global Investors Richer Than Ever!

There are more than a trillion reasons to invest in stocks and shares, and every single one of them has a dollar-sign attached.

In 2017, global investors received an incredible $1.252 trillion in company dividends, according to the latest Janus Henderson Global Dividend Index.

That is a new record, and marks a rise of 7.7% across the year, the fastest rate of growth since 2014. Underlying growth, which adjusts for movements in exchange rates, one-off special dividends and other factors, was an impressive 6.8%.

Whether you hold individual company stock, mutual funds or exchange traded funds (ETFs), your portfolio will have felt the benefit.

Minor blip

Now is a good time to remind investors of the power of dividends, as many remain rattled by the recent bout of stock market volatility.

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Rather than the end of the world, this looks like a temporary correction late into a lucrative nine-year bull run, the second longest in history. The panic is already subsiding.

Throughout it all, companies kept dishing out the dividends, and wise long-term investors kept reinvesting them back into their portfolios for growth.

Income highs

Global dividends have been driven to a new high thanks to the strengthening world economy and rising corporate confidence, Janus Henderson said.

Payouts increased in every region and almost every industry, with record-breaking increases in 11 out of 41 countries, including the US, Japan, Australia, Switzerland, Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Korea and the Netherlands.

In the US, dividend payouts grew 5.9% on a headline basis while Canada did even better, with dividends surging almost 20% to $37.5bn.

Star of the show was Asia Pacific (excluding Japan). Here, total dividends jumped 18.8% to almost $140bn, boosted by exceptionally large special dividends in Hong Kong. However, payouts in Singapore dipped from $6.6bn to $5.8bn.

Emerging market dividends grew strongly, including dramatic growth in Russia, but remain well below their 2013 peak.

Euro woe

Europe was the only disappointment, with headline growth of just 1.9% to $227bn. This was down to a weak euro during the crucial second quarter when most European dividends are paid, fewer special dividends and a handful of large companies cutting in the final quarter.

However, Germany rebounded last year with dividends growing 4.7% to $38.1bn, while in the UK underlying growth was a healthy 10%.

Dividend delight

Janus Henderson is optimistic for the year ahead forecasting underlying growth of 6.1%, with expansion continuing from every region of the world.

If the dollar remains weak then payments will translate into dollars at more favourable exchange rates, pushing headline growth to 7.7% again.

It predicts payouts totalling $1.348 trillion for 2018, yet another record.

This is a long-term wealth story, perhaps the greatest story the stock market has to tell. Since 2009, dividends have risen by almost three-quarters, and there is plenty more to come.

Yet otherwise-sensible people worry about a few weeks of share price volatility… They really should know better.

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