How to Develop Personal Investment Goals

Everyone’s goals are different. Is Altagas Ltd. (TSX:ALA) a good fit for your personal investment goals?

| More on:
win

Before developing your personal investment goals, it might help to take a look at other people’s goals. Here are some investment goals I’ve heard from retail investors such as yourself: beat the market, get income that doubles what the market offers, generate $40,000 of income annually from your portfolio, and preserve capital.

You’ll notice that these can overlap.

Beat the market

Historically, the average market rate of return has been 7-10%. So, if one of your goals is to beat the market, you’d aim to buy stocks that have an estimated return of more than 7-10%.

Right now, you can secure a +7% yield from Altagas Ltd. (TSX:ALA) before it raises its dividend by the end of the year. With this high yield, you only need minimum growth to beat the market.

think, plan, and act to work towards your financial goals

Get income that is X times what the market offers

The Canadian market (using iShares S&P/TSX 60 Index Fund (TSX:XIU) as a proxy) offers a yield of 2.65%. If one of your goals is to get income that doubles what the market offers, then you’d aim to buy stocks that offer a yield of at least 5.3%.

Not that many stocks offer a safe yield of 5.3% and offer good growth. Altagas happens to be one of them with stable cash flow supported by a diversified portfolio of regulated gas-distribution utility, power-generation, and highly contracted midstream assets.

If you find it too difficult to build a diversified portfolio with a safe 5.3% yield and good growth, rework your goal to perhaps aim for a yield of 3.98%, which is 1.5 times that of the market’s yield.

Generate $X of income annually from your portfolio

Some investors aim to have their portfolio income eventually replace their job’s income. By the time they’re able to generate their cost of living consistently from their investment income, they can choose to retire if they want to.

Since stock prices are volatile, it helps to focus on getting income from dividends instead of depending on capital appreciation.

Capital preservation

Stocks can cut their dividends due to deteriorating fundamentals, which will also likely lead to lower share prices. So, you should avoid such companies if you foresee potential fundamental deterioration, which could mean lower profitability or cash flow.

Share prices can go up or down, even if the long-term prospects of a company are still intact. If share prices drop and you sell at a loss, it also wouldn’t work.

You need to know your risk tolerance, as well as understand the companies you’re buying. If you don’t, even if you were right in buying a company that’s cheap, you might not be able to hold on to it as the stock drops further.

Investor takeaway

With the above examples, you should be able to start developing your own investment goals, whether they pertain to total returns or income.

Fool contributor Kay Ng owns shares of ALTAGAS LTD. Altagas is a recommendation of Stock Advisor Canada.

More on Dividend Stocks

Retirees sip their morning coffee outside.
Tech Stocks

2 Technology Stocks With the Kind of Potential That Could Make Millionaires

Two tech stocks with impressive growth trajectories amid elevated volatility are potential millionaire-makers.

Read more »

Train cars pass over trestle bridge in the mountains
Dividend Stocks

Why the Market May Be too Quick to Write Off These Railway and Telecom Stocks

Discover why the railway and telecom markets are experiencing significant declines and what it means for investors and value growth.

Read more »

a man celebrates his good fortune with a disco ball and confetti
Dividend Stocks

Where Will Enbridge Stock Be in 3 Years?

Enbridge stock has raised its dividend for 31 straight years. With a $39B project backlog and 5% growth ahead, here's…

Read more »

A plant grows from coins.
Dividend Stocks

2 Canadian Dividend Stocks Yielding 4% That Appear to Have the Goods to Back It Up

These Canadian dividend stocks are dependable investments, offer attractive yield of over 4%, and are backed by solid businesses.

Read more »

Lights glow in a cityscape at night.
Dividend Stocks

2 Dividend Stocks I’d Buy Today and Feel Good Holding for at Least 5 Years

Want dividend income that will last for the five years to come? These two dividend stocks are leaders in Canada.

Read more »

Investor reading the newspaper
Dividend Stocks

A 3.9% Dividend Stock That Looks Safer Than It Seems

Transcontinental just reshaped its business with a $2.1 billion sale, and that cash could make its dividend look safer than…

Read more »

Canadian investor contemplating U.S. stocks with multiple doors to choose from.
Dividend Stocks

BCE vs. Telus: Which Telecom Belongs in Your TFSA?

Although Telus, the telecom giant, offers a 10.3% dividend yield compared to BCE's 5.3% yield, is it still the better…

Read more »

A worker overlooks an oil refinery plant.
Dividend Stocks

What is Considered a Good Dividend Stock? 2 Infrastructure Stocks That Fit the Bill

Here's how you can be sure the dividend stocks you buy and hold for the long haul are some of…

Read more »