My next question is probably pretty rudimentary, but forgive me. With capital gains-style investing, I "aim" for an APR of around 7%, so that I could maintain a post-ERE SWR of 3-4% after taxes and inflation. On the other hand, I can't help but notice the average dividend yield on these stocks is only ~2.5%.
Is the idea that, as long as the dividend growth rate is beating inflation, it's not as important for the actual yield to beat inflation? It makes sense to me, theoretically, that if I buy a stock yielding 2.5% and it increases the dividend by exactly the rate of inflation year after year, then I would simply have that same income of 2.5% (minus taxes) year after year. Am I thinking about this right?
(Obviously I'm totally new to dividend income investing!)
If I do have the right idea, I must admit it sounds more attractive than chasing capital gains, IMO, at least for my ERE strategy. On the other hand, I understand the dividend strategy has been very popular for the past several years and through the downturn... which makes me skeptical of its potential in the future just by default. (If only I had been so skeptical of the Permanent Portfolio strategy back in 2011... as gold neared $1900 an ounce.
