Dividend Investment Calculator
The calculator will estimate investment needed or monthly dividend figures from Philippine stocks and REITs.
How To Use The Calculator
This calculator helps you plan dividend investing in PSE-listed stocks and REITs. The calculator starts with a goal selector. Pick the one that matches your situation, and it shows the right fields for that goal. Find your goal below and follow the steps.
- How much do I need to invest for my monthly dividend target?
- How much monthly dividend will I earn — I have money to invest and don't own stocks or REITs yet.
- How much monthly dividend will I earn — I already own stocks or REITs.
"How much do I need to invest for my monthly dividend target?"
You have a desired monthly income from dividends and want to know the total capital required to reach it.
- Established Stocks: blue-chip PSE companies with consistent dividend track records
- High-Yield Stocks: higher potential income, but carries higher risk
- REITs: real estate investment trusts with stable dividend income
- Custom Selection: search and hand-pick any dividend-paying PSE stock yourself
Your results will show:
- HeadlineThe total investment needed, plus your estimated monthly and annual earnings. Because stocks are purchased in board lot sizes, your actual earnings may be slightly higher than your target, and both figures are shown when they differ.
- Portfolio BreakdownPer-stock table showing each stock's name, yield, investment amount, and estimated monthly and annual dividends.
- Total rowAggregated totals and your portfolio's weighted average yield.
You can also download the breakdown as an image for easy saving or sharing.
"How much monthly dividend will I earn — I have money to invest and don't own stocks or REITs yet. "
You have a lump sum ready to invest and want to see what kind of dividend income it could generate.
- Established Stocks: blue-chip PSE companies with consistent dividend track records
- High-Yield Stocks: higher potential income, but carries higher risk
- REITs: real estate investment trusts with stable dividend income
- Custom Selection: search and hand-pick any dividend-paying PSE stock yourself
Your results will show:
- Headline
Your estimated monthly and annual dividend income, plus how your budget was deployed, showing the amount actually invested and any amount left uninvested due to board lot size rounding.
- Portfolio BreakdownPer-stock table showing each stock's name, yield, investment amount, and estimated monthly and annual dividends.
- Total rowAggregated totals: your original budget, the amount actually invested, any uninvested remainder, and your portfolio's weighted average yield.
You can also download the breakdown as an image for easy saving or sharing.
"How much monthly dividend will I earn — I already own stocks or REITs."
You already hold dividend stocks or REITs and want to estimate the income your current portfolio generates.
Your results will show:
- HeadlineYour estimated monthly and annual dividend income from your current holdings.
- Portfolio BreakdownPer-stock table showing each stock's name, yield, shares held, market value, and estimated monthly and annual dividends.
- Total rowAggregated totals and your portfolio's weighted average yield.
You can also download the breakdown as an image for easy saving or sharing.
Good to Know
Monthly figures
Based on historical dividend declarations published by the Philippine Stock Exchange, PSE-listed companies and REITs distribute dividends quarterly, semi-annually, or annually rather than monthly.[1] This calculator divides annual dividend yields by 12 to present monthly estimates, since most people plan finances in monthly terms. Your actual dividend payments will arrive on each company's payout schedule.
Board lots and adjusted amounts
The PSE requires buying shares in fixed minimum increments called board lots (e.g., 10, 100, or 1,000 shares depending on price). The calculator rounds your shares to valid board lot sizes, so actual investment amounts may differ slightly from your input. A disclaimer below the breakdown explains any differences.
Stock exclusions and ₱0 results
- If your allocated budget for a stock isn't enough to buy even one board lot, that stock is excluded from the results. A notice will tell you which stocks were skipped. Fix this by removing the stock, increasing its allocation, or increasing your total investment.
- If all selected stocks are excluded (budget too small for any board lot), the result shows ₱0. To fix this, increase your investment, choose lower-priced stocks (REITs are often a good option), reduce the number of stocks, or increase allocation on the ones you want most.
- Any stock with a 0% dividend yield is automatically excluded since it wouldn't generate dividend income.
This Methodology section explains how the calculator's pre-screened investment portfolios are constructed, and how dividend income calculations and underlying assumptions work. It is intended for users who want to understand the reasoning behind the tool's recommendations.
Investment Portfolios
The portfolio selection methodology is designed for practical implementation within the Dividend Calculator tool while maintaining a disciplined, rule-based framework grounded in established dividend-investing principles. [9]
The calculator offers three pre-screened portfolios, each built on a distinct strategy. All three follow a two-stage process: eligibility filtering - hard rules a stock must pass - followed by a scoring model that ranks survivors into a final selection.
1. Stable Income Stocks
Designed for investors who prioritize reliable, sustainable dividend income over chasing the highest possible yield.
The portfolio starts from the PSE Dividend Yield (DivY) Index [2] - a 20-stock index maintained and rebalanced semi-annually by the Philippine Stock Exchange. The DivY Index itself already screens for minimum listing history, free-float requirements, liquidity thresholds, a three-year dividend payment track record, and financial soundness. This gives the portfolio a pre-vetted starting list of dividend-paying companies in the Philippine market.
Additional filters and scoring are then applied to focus specifically on dividend stability and sustainability.
1.1 Eligibility Filters
Each condition must be satisfied before a stock proceeds to the scoring stage. Taken together, these filters also serve as layered yield trap protection: stocks that clear all seven checks have been screened against unsustainable payout levels, declining dividends, price deterioration, and excessive volatility.
-
5-year payment consistency
Must have paid dividends for at least 5 consecutive years. The 5-year requirement extends beyond the PSE DivY Index's 3-year baseline, prioritizing uninterrupted payment history as the primary signal of reliability. [2] -
Payout ratio cap of 75%
Ensures a meaningful earnings buffer for reinvestment and protection during downturns. No lower bound is applied - very low payout ratios (15-35%) are a strength, demonstrating excellent earnings coverage and room for future growth. [3][4] -
Non-negative 5-year dividend growth
Dividend CAGR over 5 years must be at or above zero, covering a full market cycle. Only companies that have at least maintained their payouts are included. -
Non-negative 3-year dividend growth
A shorter-term confirmation that stability has continued recently, reinforcing the 5-year view without adding complexity. -
Minimum yield of 4.0%
Set above the recent PSEi market average (~3.4%), ensuring the portfolio delivers meaningful income relative to local benchmarks such as T-bills and other Philippine investment options. [5] -
MA200 price support
Share price must be at or above 97% of the 200-day simple moving average. Stocks trading well below this level are often in sustained downtrends where high yields reflect price collapse rather than genuine income strength. The 3% tolerance accommodates normal short-term pullbacks within an intact uptrend. [6] -
Volatility ceiling
Annualized 252-day volatility must be below the greater of 30% or the 70th percentile of the full DivY Index. The 30% floor approximates the upper bound of normal PSEi-component volatility and governs under typical conditions. The P70 is measured across all DivY Index constituents, so the ceiling adjusts upward during broad market stress to avoid over-filtering. [7]
1.2 Scoring Model
Stocks that pass all eligibility filters are ranked using an absolute scoring model - each factor is measured against fixed reference values rather than the relative range of eligible stocks. This anchors scores to objective financial standards regardless of pool composition.
| Factor | Formula Summary | Weight |
|---|---|---|
| Consistency Score | Based on consecutive dividend-paying years, capped at 20 years | 35% |
| Payout Score | Centered at 41% optimal payout; penalizes higher ratios [8] | 25% |
| Growth Score | 5-year dividend CAGR, capped to prevent outlier dominance | 25% |
| Yield Score | Centered at 5.5% sweet spot; penalizes very low and very high yields | 15% |
Consistency receives the highest weight because long payment history is the strongest signal of dividend reliability. [10] Payout ratio and growth are weighted equally to balance sustainability and durability of distributions. [8] Yield receives the lowest weight by design - chasing high yield can lead to dividend traps. [11]
1.3 Final Selection
Eligible stocks are ranked by total score and the highest-scoring names make the final portfolio.
2. High Yield Income Stocks
Also built from the PSE DivY Index, this portfolio benefits from the same exchange-level screening for listing history, liquidity, and financial soundness. It targets investors comfortable with moderately higher income at the cost of some stability, accepting a broader set of stocks with higher yield thresholds and more permissive filters than the Stable Income Portfolio - while still applying guardrails against distressed names and yield traps.
2.1 Eligibility Filters
Each condition must be satisfied before a stock proceeds to the scoring stage. Together, these filters provide layered yield trap protection: stocks that pass all six checks have been screened against unsustainable payout levels, declining dividends, price deterioration, and excessive volatility.
-
3-year payment consistency
Three consecutive years of dividends covers a full earnings cycle and filters out one-off special dividends. -
Payout ratio cap of 85%
Excludes companies with negative earnings (payout ratio below 0%) and those distributing more than 85% of earnings. Retains a 15% buffer for reinvestment and debt servicing while accommodating high-yield names with mature, stable cash flows. [11][4] -
5-year dividend CAGR ≥ -5%
Allows minor temporary reductions (for example, a pandemic-year cut followed by recovery) while excluding stocks in structural decline. -
Minimum yield of 5.0%
Focused on companies providing meaningfully higher income than the broader market. -
MA200 price support
Share price must be at or above 92% of the 200-day simple moving average. This catches yield traps where a stock's price is in a sustained downtrend, artificially inflating the dividend yield. The 8% tolerance is wider than the Stable Income portfolio's 3% because dips of up to 5-7% below the MA200 are routine pullbacks for volatile high-yield names, not necessarily signals of structural decline. [6] -
Volatility ceiling
Annualized 252-day volatility must be below the greater of 40% or the 70th percentile of the full DivY Index. The 40% floor excludes genuinely distressed or speculative-grade names while allowing moderately volatile high-yield stocks. The P70 is measured across all DivY Index constituents, so the ceiling adjusts upward during broad market stress to avoid over-filtering. [7]
2.2 Scoring Model
Stocks are ranked using a relative (normalized) scoring method - each metric is scaled against the range observed among eligible stocks only.
| Factor | Formula Summary | Weight |
|---|---|---|
| Yield Score | Normalized: higher yield = higher score | 40% |
| Consistency Score | Normalized: more years = higher score | 20% |
| Growth Score | Normalized 5-year CAGR | 20% |
| Payout Score | Best 30-70% range scores 100; penalties outside range | 20% |
2.3 Final Selection
After filtering, stocks are ranked by total score and the highest-scoring names are selected for the portfolio.
3. REITs
Combines strong current income with defensive quality characteristics for Philippine REITs. Under the REIT Act of 2009, REITs are legally required to distribute at least 90% of distributable income, [12] giving them a distinct income profile compared to regular equities. The methodology respects this regulatory reality while screening for stability.
3.1 Eligibility Filters
Each condition must be satisfied before a REIT proceeds to the scoring stage.
-
3-year payment consistency
Three full years of uninterrupted payments cover a complete business cycle and ensure a reliable track record. -
Payout ratio 90-105%
Strictly within the REIT Act's legal distribution requirement. The 105% upper bound allows minor one-off reserve usage but prevents chronic over-distribution that would erode capital. Lower payouts within this band are scored as safer. [12] -
Minimum yield of 4.5%
Delivers meaningfully higher income than bank deposits or bonds. -
Volatility ceiling
Annualized 252-day volatility must be below the greater of 25% or the 70th percentile of the full DivY Index. REITs derive stable rental income, so their price behavior should be materially calmer than the broader PSE. The P70 is measured across DivY Index constituents (not REITs alone, as the REIT universe is too small for reliable percentiles), so the ceiling adjusts during broad market stress. -
Yield trap guard
Excluded when: yield > 8% AND (volatility > 22% OR 3-year dividend CAGR (2-year if unavailable) < 0). Blocks the classic yield-trap pattern where collapsing prices artificially inflate the yield while dividends stagnate or shrink. [11]
3.2 Scoring Model
Stocks are ranked using a relative (normalized) scoring method - each metric is scaled against the range observed among eligible REITs only.
| Factor | Formula Summary | Weight |
|---|---|---|
| Yield Score | Normalized: higher yield = higher score | 35% |
| Growth Score | Normalized 3-year CAGR (2-year if unavailable) | 25% |
| Consistency Score | Normalized: more years = higher score | 15% |
| Volatility Score | Normalized inverse: lower volatility = higher score | 15% |
| Payout Safety Score | Normalized inverse within 90-105% band: lower = safer | 10% |
3.3 Final Selection
The highest-scoring REITs are selected for the final portfolio.
The portfolios above are produced through a systematic screening and ranking model applied to the available dataset. The information is provided for general informational purposes and should not be interpreted as personalized investment advice or as services requiring a licensed investment adviser.
Dividend Income Calculations
The calculator supports three modes, each applying the same dividend data but differing in what the user provides and what the tool computes.
1.) Required Investment Estimation
In this mode the user sets a monthly dividend income target, and the calculator works backward to determine how much capital is needed.
For each stock in the portfolio, the per-stock annual target equals the monthly target multiplied by the stock's allocation percentage, then multiplied by 12. Raw shares are derived by dividing that annual target by the stock's annual dividend per share. Because the PSE requires trades in board lots, the share count is rounded up to the nearest valid board lot so that the resulting income meets or slightly exceeds the target. The required investment is then the adjusted share count multiplied by the current market price.
Totals are summed across all stocks. The portfolio's weighted average yield equals total annual dividends divided by total required investment.
Formula (per stock):
- Annual Target = Monthly Target × (Allocation / 100) × 12
- Raw Shares = Annual Target / Dividend Per Share
- Adjusted Shares = ceil(Raw Shares / Board Lot) × Board Lot (rounds up)
- Required Investment = Adjusted Shares × Current Price
- Annual Dividend = Adjusted Shares × Dividend Per Share
- Monthly Dividend = Annual Dividend / 12
Worked example: TEL (price 1,390, board lot 5, dividend/share 94.94), 40% allocation, monthly target 10,000
| Step | Calculation | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Annual Target | 10,000 × 0.40 × 12 | 48,000 |
| Raw Shares | 48,000 / 94.94 | 505.58 |
| Adjusted Shares | ceil(505.58 / 5) × 5 = 102 × 5 | 510 shares |
| Required Investment | 510 × 1,390 | ₱708,900 |
| Annual Dividend | 510 × 94.94 | ₱48,419.40 |
| Monthly Dividend | 48,419.40 / 12 | ₱4,034.95 |
Board-lot rounding causes the actual income to slightly exceed the target.
2.) Income Estimation from Investment Amount
Here the user enters a lump-sum peso amount and the calculator estimates how much dividend income it can generate.
Each stock's budget equals the investment amount multiplied by that stock's allocation percentage. Raw shares are calculated by dividing the stock budget by the current market price, then rounded down to the nearest PSE board lot since partial lots cannot be purchased. If the budget is too small to afford even one board lot of a particular stock, that stock is excluded from the result.
Because of board-lot rounding, the actual invested amount may be less than the original budget. Annual dividends for each stock equal the adjusted share count multiplied by the annual dividend per share.
Formula (per stock):
- Stock Budget = Investment Amount × (Allocation / 100)
- Raw Shares = Stock Budget / Current Price
- Adjusted Shares = floor(Raw Shares / Board Lot) × Board Lot (rounds down)
- Actual Investment = Adjusted Shares × Current Price
- Annual Dividend = Adjusted Shares × Dividend Per Share
- Monthly Dividend = Annual Dividend / 12
Worked example: TEL (price 1,390, board lot 5, dividend/share 94.94), 40% allocation, investment amount 500,000
| Step | Calculation | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Stock Budget | 500,000 × 0.40 | 200,000 |
| Raw Shares | 200,000 / 1,390 | 143.88 |
| Adjusted Shares | floor(143.88 / 5) × 5 = 28 × 5 | 140 shares |
| Actual Investment | 140 × 1,390 | ₱194,600 |
| Annual Dividend | 140 × 94.94 | ₱13,291.60 |
| Monthly Dividend | 13,291.60 / 12 | ₱1,107.63 |
| Uninvested Remainder | 200,000 - 194,600 | ₱5,400 |
If the budget cannot afford even one board lot of a stock, that stock is excluded from the results.
3.) Income Estimation from Owned Shares
The user enters exact share counts already held. No board-lot adjustment is applied since the shares are already owned.
Dividends for each stock equal shares multiplied by the annual dividend per share. Portfolio value equals shares multiplied by the current market price.
Formula (per stock):
- Market Value = Shares × Current Price
- Annual Dividend = Shares × Dividend Per Share
- Monthly Dividend = Annual Dividend / 12
Worked example: AREIT (price 36.00, dividend/share 2.20), 500 shares
| Step | Calculation | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Market Value | 500 × 36.00 | ₱18,000 |
| Annual Dividend | 500 × 2.20 | ₱1,100 |
| Monthly Dividend | 1,100 / 12 | ₱91.67 |
Common to All Modes
The monthly estimate is the annual dividend total divided by 12. The weighted average dividend yield equals total annual dividends divided by total portfolio value or investment.
Monthly Estimate = Total Annual Dividend / 12
Weighted Avg. Yield = (Total Annual Dividend / Total Portfolio Value) × 100
Calculation Assumptions
The calculator relies on the following assumptions and simplifications.
- Dividend data – Uses trailing twelve months (TTM) dividend per share and TTM yield, held constant for the projection.
- Stock prices – Live market prices at the time of calculation. Results change as prices move.
- Monthly figures – Annual dividends divided by 12 because most personal budgeting is month-based, even though actual payouts follow each company's own schedule (quarterly, semi-annually, etc.).
- Board lots – PSE board lot sizes are enforced. Share counts snap to valid lot boundaries.
- No taxes or fees – Broker commissions, PSE transaction fees, and withholding taxes are not deducted.
- No reinvestment or compounding – Shows one year of dividend income with no reinvestment assumed.
- No inflation adjustment – All figures are in nominal pesos.
- Allocation constraint – Portfolio allocations must total 100%.
Dividend Data
This section shows the dividend stock data that powers the calculator. Values are estimates derived from trailing dividend history and current market prices. The three preset portfolios are shown below, followed by all PSE dividend-paying stocks with available data for custom portfolios.
1.) Stable Income Stocks
Steadier dividend payers with relatively consistent track records.
| Symbol | Company | Price | Board Lot | Annual Yield | Annual Dividend |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MBT | Metropolitan Bank & Trust Company | ₱69.00 | 10 | 7.25% | ₱5.00 |
| MER | Manila Electric Company | ₱599.50 | 10 | 4.18% | ₱25.064 |
| RLC | Robinsons Land Corporation | ₱17.50 | 100 | 4.29% | ₱0.75 |
| RRHI | Robinsons Retail Holdings, Inc. | ₱36.30 | 100 | 5.51% | ₱2.00 |
2.) High-Yield Income Stocks
Higher-yield dividend payers that may come with elevated risk.
| Symbol | Company | Price | Board Lot | Annual Yield | Annual Dividend |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MBT | Metropolitan Bank & Trust Company | ₱69.00 | 10 | 7.25% | ₱5.00 |
| LTG | LT Group, Inc. | ₱14.40 | 100 | 10.76% | ₱1.55 |
| TEL | PLDT Inc. | ₱1,315.00 | 5 | 7.22% | ₱95.00 |
| GLO | Globe Telecom, Inc. | ₱1,602.00 | 5 | 6.24% | ₱100.00 |
| RRHI | Robinsons Retail Holdings, Inc. | ₱36.30 | 100 | 5.51% | ₱2.00 |
3.) REITs
Real Estate Investment Trusts with established operating profiles.
| Symbol | Company | Price | Board Lot | Annual Yield | Annual Dividend |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MREIT | MREIT, Inc. | ₱13.88 | 100 | 7.22% | ₱1.002 |
| AREIT | AREIT, Inc. | ₱40.10 | 100 | 6.01% | ₱2.41 |
| CREIT | Citicore Energy REIT Corp. | ₱3.35 | 1,000 | 6.03% | ₱0.202 |
| RCR | RL Commercial REIT, Inc. | ₱7.11 | 100 | 6.00% | ₱0.427 |
4.) Dividend Stocks
All PSE-listed dividend-paying stocks with available data, available for custom portfolio selection.
| Symbol | Company | Price | Board Lot | Annual Yield | Annual Dividend |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AC | Ayala Corporation | ₱516.00 | 10 | 1.78% | ₱9.21 |
| ACEN | ACEN CORPORATION | ₱2.49 | 1,000 | 2.01% | ₱0.05 |
| ACENA | ACEN Corporation Perpetual Series A Preferred Shares | ₱1,000.00 | 5 | 7.13% | ₱71.33 |
| ACENB | ACEN Corporation Perpetual Series B Preferred Shares | ₱1,040.00 | 5 | 7.69% | ₱80.00 |
| ACPAR | Ayala Corporation Non-Voting Perpetual Preferred A Shares | ₱2,496.00 | 5 | 6.37% | ₱158.968 |
| ACPB3 | Ayala Corporation Class "B" Series 3 Preferred Shares | ₱1,996.00 | 5 | 6.07% | ₱121.076 |
| ACR | Alsons Consolidated Resources, Inc. | ₱0.61 | 10,000 | 3.28% | ₱0.02 |
| AEV | Aboitiz Equity Ventures, Inc. | ₱30.80 | 100 | 5.00% | ₱1.54 |
| AGI | Alliance Global Group, Inc. | ₱8.35 | 100 | 1.20% | ₱0.10 |
| ALCO | Arthaland Corporation | ₱0.44 | 10,000 | 2.76% | ₱0.012 |
| ALHI | Anchor Land Holdings, Inc. | ₱3.60 | 100 | 1.11% | ₱0.04 |
| ALI | Ayala Land, Inc. | ₱19.22 | 100 | 3.35% | ₱0.644 |
| ALTER | Alternergy Holdings Corporation | ₱0.75 | 1,000 | 1.33% | ₱0.01 |
| ANS | A. Soriano Corporation | ₱15.00 | 100 | 5.00% | ₱0.75 |
| AP | Aboitiz Power Corporation | ₱42.00 | 100 | 5.60% | ₱2.35 |
| APX | Apex Mining Co., Inc. | ₱15.24 | 1,000 | 0.91% | ₱0.139 |
| AREIT | AREIT, Inc. | ₱40.10 | 100 | 6.01% | ₱2.41 |
| ASLAG | Raslag Corp. | ₱0.81 | 1,000 | 6.17% | ₱0.05 |
| ATI | Asian Terminals, Inc. | ₱31.00 | 100 | 4.85% | ₱1.505 |
| AUB | Asia United Bank Corporation | ₱43.00 | 10 | 4.65% | ₱2.00 |
| AXLM | Axelum Resources Corp. | ₱2.03 | 1,000 | 2.54% | ₱0.052 |
| BALAI | Balai Ni Fruitas Inc. | ₱0.31 | 10,000 | 1.61% | ₱0.005 |
| BDO | BDO Unibank, Inc. | ₱123.80 | 10 | 3.47% | ₱4.30 |
| BKR | Bright Kindle Resources & Investments Inc. | ₱0.62 | 1,000 | 0.65% | ₱0.004 |
| BLOOM | Bloomberry Resorts Corporation | ₱2.36 | 100 | 3.59% | ₱0.085 |
| BNCOM | Bank of Commerce | ₱9.15 | 100 | 4.92% | ₱0.45 |
| BPI | Bank of the Philippine Islands | ₱103.00 | 10 | 4.23% | ₱4.36 |
| BRN | A Brown Company, Inc. | ₱0.93 | 1,000 | 2.69% | ₱0.025 |
| BRNPB | A Brown Company, Inc. Series B Preferred Shares | ₱100.00 | 10 | 8.25% | ₱8.25 |
| BRNPC | A Brown Company, Inc. Series C Preferred Shares | ₱102.60 | 10 | 8.53% | ₱8.75 |
| CA | Concrete Aggregates Corp. "A" | ₱53.25 | 100 | 3.08% | ₱1.639 |
| CBC | China Banking Corporation | ₱67.45 | 10 | 3.71% | ₱2.50 |
| CDC | Cityland Development Corporation | ₱0.56 | 1,000 | 6.70% | ₱0.038 |
| CEBCP | Cebu Air, Inc. Convertible Preferred Shares | ₱32.80 | 100 | 27.80% | ₱9.12 |
| CEU | Centro Escolar University | ₱16.30 | 100 | 8.59% | ₱1.40 |
| CIC | Concepcion Industrial Corporation | ₱12.94 | 100 | 7.73% | ₱1.00 |
| CLI | Cebu Landmasters, Inc. | ₱2.42 | 1,000 | 7.44% | ₱0.18 |
| CLIA1 | Cebu Landmasters, Inc. Series A-1 Preferred Shares | ₱1,002.00 | 5 | 7.57% | ₱75.85 |
| CLIA2 | Cebu Landmasters, Inc. Series A-2 Preferred Shares | ₱1,040.00 | 5 | 7.93% | ₱82.50 |
| CNPF | Century Pacific Food, Inc. | ₱34.00 | 100 | 3.24% | ₱1.10 |
| See all dividend stocks → | |||||
Data is approximate and based on trailing dividend history. Prices and dividend figures are refreshed periodically and may not reflect the latest market activity.
Column Definitions:
- Symbol - PSE ticker code
- Company - Full company name
- Price - Current market price per share
- Board Lot - PSE minimum trading unit; shares must be bought/sold in multiples of this number
- Annual Yield - Estimated annual dividend yield (%)
- Annual Dividend - Estimated annual dividend per share
References
Sources cited in the Dividend Calculator.
- Historical Dividend Declaration Records. PSE EDGE. Philippine Stock Exchange, Inc. Dividend Declaration Records - PSE EDGE
- PSE DivY Index - Policy on Index Management. Philippine Stock Exchange. Policy on Index Management - PSE DivY Index
- Ideal Payout Ratio. Dividend.com. What Is an Ideal Payout Ratio?
- Rising Dividend Yields: Red Flags. Charles Schwab. Rising Dividend Yields: Red Flags
- PSEi Dividend Yield Ratio. CEIC Data. Dividend Yield Ratio - Index Level: PSEi
- Moving Averages: What They Are and How to Use Them. Investopedia. Moving Averages
- Volatility: Meaning in Finance and How It Works With Stocks. Investopedia. Annualized Volatility
- The Power of Dividends (payout ratio analysis). Hartford Funds. The Power of Dividends: Past, Present, and Future
- Arnott, R. D. & Asness, C. S. (2003). "Surprise! Higher Dividends = Higher Earnings Growth." Financial Analysts Journal, 59(1), 70-87.
- Dividend Strategy with Quality Yields. S&P Global. Practice Essentials - Dividend Strategy with Quality Yields
- Not All Dividend Stocks Are Safe. Morningstar. Not All Dividend Stocks Are Safe - Here's How to Avoid Dividend Traps
- REIT Act of 2009 IRR - Distribution Requirement. Implementing Rules and Regulations of Republic Act No. 9856. LawPhil. IRR of the REIT Act of 2009 - Section on Dividend Distribution