A dividend tracker helps you keep track of your dividend returns and important dividend events.
Understand Dividend Trackers
Some investors focus on dividend return. They want to achieve a certain monthly or yearly passive dividend income. Dividend Trackers help to keep track of dividend returns. They also remind the user of important dividend events, like ex-dividend dates and dividend payment dates.
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Example:
You want to achieve a monthly dividend return of 1000$. To calculate your current return, you'd have to manually gather the dividend data of all of your investments, predict future dividends and then multiply it with your shares. That's a lot of work a dividend tracker does for you.
Important Functions of Dividend Trackers
Good dividend trackers provide a set of functions that help you as a dividend investor.
- Broad collection of securities
To be able to track all of your assets, it's important that your dividend tracker supports many different security types and exchanges. Preferably globally. - Insights and analytics
Good dividend trackers help you understand your investments. They show give you information about diversification and other insights. - Important events
Helping you keep up with important events such as ex-dividend dates and payment dates is also a task good dividend trackers should do. - Portfolio overview
A few dividend trackers also track your portfolio. This saves a lot for work, since you have to enter the same data for your dividends and portfolio.
This information is educational only and not a recommendation to buy, hold, or sell an investment or financial product, or take any action. This information is neither individualized nor a research report, and must not serve as the basis for any investment decision. All investments involve risk, including the possible loss of capital. Information is from sources deemed reliable on the date of publication, but Stock Events does not guarantee its accuracy.