| Direct Investment Plans (Dividend Reinvestment Plans or DRIPs) |
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DRIPs and Fees |
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Avoid Fee-Driven DRIPs
Most DRIPs charge little or nothing to buy more stock. But fee-laden direct investment plans (dividend reinvestment plans or DRIPs) seem to be popping up every day, and in some cases these high fees are ruining the plans offered by great companies. If you've built up shares in a company by investing small amounts over the years, it's difficult to know what to do when fees are added. For some plans, such as those that cap their cash investment fee at $2.50, the choice is between getting out of the plan or committing to investing larger amounts, such as $250, less frequently. (A $250 invested would limit the fee to 1% of your investment.) This strategy is only marginally acceptable, and only that for the best companies. For plans that charge $5, though, the fee may be too much to bear. This is not intended to discourage you from investing directly through company-sponsored plans, only to avoid those plans that have fees.
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If you doubt that a $5 fee has a significant impact, read on. |
A small fee can make a difference! |
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Can a relatively small fee have a significant impact on your investment results? In a word, YES. Take a great stock like Coca-Cola. Imagine what would have happened if Coca-Cola had adopted a fee of $5 ten years ago, and an investor had been sending in $50 a month...investing a total of $6,000 over the ten-year period. The $5 lost on each investment, rather than owning 480 shares worth $32,017, the investor would have 432 shares worth $28,815. So, while the agent would have gained $600, the investor would have lost $3,202! That’s more than half of the $6,000 invested over the period!
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The Bigger Picture |
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As we've demonstrated, the true cost of a high-fee DRIP can be many times the fee itself, owing to lost appreciation, diminished dividends, and the exposure to pricing risk if you attempt to invest less frequently. The hole you dig initially by paying high fees also translates into a loss of time, since it can easily take a full year for each cash investment to recoup the fee. Continuing to invest in such a plan, then, means being perpetually behind even as your company grows in value. Investors need to weigh these negatives against their ultimate goal of building wealth over the long term. If a high-fee plan can cost thousands of dollars for just one company, consider the impact on an entire portfolio! Realistically, investing in several of these plans can easily cost tens of thousands of dollars over the course of your investing life, with the sad result that an investor might be faced with delaying his or her retirement (or other major goal) for many years.
Could high fees mean a less comfortable retirement? The numbers seem to support that view, so it makes sense to minimize the use of high-fee DRIPs. Ask yourself whether a company (whose plan adopts such fees) is really that much better than its competitors...and keep in mind that it has to be far better in order to justify the cost.
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