4 Comments
User's avatar
Mystic Muse's avatar

Hi.

I've purchased the blue print, dividend tracker and 50 monthly dividend stocks. I've read the blue print and aware that there are different tiers to the dividend income machine. Do you have a list of stocks that you are using for each tier? I think somewhere you have included 15 core stocks which is great info but what about the weekly payers and quarterly? If you've already informed us then i apologise.

Many thanks,

Marcus 😁

TheGamingDividend's avatar

Thanks for taking interest and reading!

This linked article is a great starting point.

The first 5 holdings are for tier 1 -

stocks 6 - 9 are for tier 2

I would consider stock # 10 as tier 3

I will release a more clear approach in the future! Thanks for bringing this up.

https://thegamingdividend.substack.com/p/top-10-stock-picks-for-2026-the-ultimate?utm_source=profile&utm_medium=reader2

Mystic Muse's avatar

Hi, sorry for the late reply. I'm so excited about this project. I'm so very grateful for all that you have shared. I wish I'd have come across your substack years ago as I'm almost 50yrs old 🧐I've just started purchasing fractional shares of META, Microsoft and Amazon due to them being in the red. I will take a look at the link that you have attached. There's a lot to learn but I'm getting there. I'm also looking at taking up trading as a part time income. I will be able to cash in my private pension at the age of 55, I will be adding that to my passive income machine.

Many thanks 👍🏻

Peter Durant's avatar

I just recently subscribed and am learning a lot about dividend investing. I am a complete novice to this, so I just had a few basic questions.

I am now getting familiar with the companies and dividend ETFs that you suggest investing in, but I am wondering if I should be looking for optimum entry prices to buy and if there will be any sell alerts when the stock/ETF might not be worth holding on to.

Finally, do you recommend buying these dividend stocks/ETFs in a Roth IRA rather than a brokerage account to avoid paying capital gain taxes on any of the dividends or returns? I was thinking that if I trade these under a Roth IRA, I would not be taxed when I withdraw my gains, unlike a normal brokerage account that would be subject to capital gains taxes. Interested in your thoughts/ideas. Thanks again for providing a great education on dividend investing.