@tayls3215

Great video again Professor G.
Makes so much sense,so wish you were making these 20 yrs ago.
I would have been retired by now listening to your advice.

@henrymitchell9717

Dividend investing has always been significantly more satisfying than the buy and hold strategy to me. It's so much more exciting to receive distributions every quarter or month as opposed to waiting years and years to sell. You can use those distributions to pay bills, go on vacation or reinvest to make even more next time there's a distribution.

@EdwardsFitzgeralds

I usually look up your videos for updates! Our government has no idea how people are suffering these days. I feel for people with disabilities not getting the help they deserve. Thank you advisor PAP, imagine investing $102,000 and received $755,500 within three  months.

@alexisvelazquez1415

Your dividend calculation is wrong for SCHD since you did not take into account the dividend growth rate. SCHD may currently be yielding 3.52% but the shares originally purchased 10 yrs ago would have a significantly higher yield on cost and thereby increasing the yield you are getting at the future value.

@Phlfwlr

I love your videos! I’ve watched so many investing channels and I’ve easily gotten the most value when it comes to ETF/dividend investing from you.

@LaurenMargaretMcCarthy

I'll be retiring soon. 30% split between VOO and BRK.B and 70% in a variety of high yield dividend income investments. Preferred stocks, closed end-funds, covered calls, ARCC and MAIN REITS and more. This does not include short-term bonds (SGOV) and cash.

@augusteelder6483

Informative. What I don't understand is: retiring early, and keeping assets that you plan to live off of in a growth fund, given its volatility. Systematically selling shares you intend to live decades off of, and enduring downturns all the while...that sounds less than retiring comfortably...unless I'm not grasping something fundamental.

@asphaltandtacos

I prefer a combination of the two strategies for income.  Long term capital gains and dividends

@runek12

I think what's really interesting is that your dividend re-investment, can essentially bypass the contribution limit of a Roth IRA, so if you did the QQQ and rolled it over at 10 years, you could basically invest $17,000 a year, instead of $7000

@Eric-yn6ur

This is the exact question I was looking for. Why not just S&P for 20+ years then transfer....thank you!!

@aprilxm

Thanks for this video. Great information. Do you have videos for retirees?

@garlictoastreviews

I watched the video twice and I could not ever figure out what strategy to follow that would allow me to somehow not be taxed when taking dividends from a brokerage.  But maybe that is by design so I feel the need to buy your course.  Great job!

@jpviegas2000

Another video good for the guy that makes it. He does not need to work. If his content monetizes enough and he sells the training. Other than that, the math showed is crap. Grab an excel (use his model) and do your math. How much many will you need to live your normal life in 10 years with cost of living going forward like it is? How much money can you put initially and sequentially every month?

@MickieJamesFTW

Me seeing this as I just deposited to buy Rolls Royce and Greggs lol.

My ISA (tax adv), is just 3 fund and 5% MSTR.

@bmannering

Growth (4% rule) vs div. snowball vs growth and switch to div is a very interesting debate.  I would love to see some modeling over various time horizons using SCHD (including div CARG) vs SCHG (assuming Roth).  Is there a B/E or corss over time horizon?  Which of the three strategies will dominate for retirment casflow at the 10yr, 20yr, and 30yr marks?

@eugenehodge

Great video! Would it be a sound decesion to deploy the 3 ETF strategy in my family's HSA?... It seems reasonable since I have another tax advantage way to store and grow wealth for my family.

@jimdixon6688

What do you think of the combo VIG & SCHD. Drip on and 7k this year between the 2 of them in my Son and Daughter Roth and 2 grandkids 200 each a month. In other words both of the kids their 30 are Roth maxed out each year in the grandkids early 200 a month all of them in VIG and SCHD

@janscavnicar8992

I know you are not from EU but can you try making a video for Eu investors because some stuff are not available in europe.

@DeejayJimmy90

What if you borrow against your growth stocks later in life and purchase schd with that money?

@roykmrbandoo

Hello, is captions(CC) available for deaf person like me to watch the videos on your dividend masters? Thanks.