Faisal Karmali
March 06, 2026
Money Education Financial literacy Commentary TrendingAre You Divided Over Dividends?
I get it - dividends seem appealing to most retirees.
You invest in a company, collect a percentage back, and it can start to feel like a paycheck just for owning the stock.
But, as we know from advising hundreds of clients about their retirements, I can tell you dividends are a slippery slope.
It’s not that there’s anything wrong with dividends themselves, but it’s the reliance that becomes the problem.
The assumption that dividends will be your retirement income strategy without touching the principal is potentially dangerous.
Why?
Because they’re not guaranteed.
Dividends are set by corporate boards and can be reduced or eliminated at any time.
In fact, during the 2020 pandemic, more than 1,200 companies globally cut or suspended dividends, according to Janus Henderson’s Global Dividend Index.¹
So building a retirement around dividends can unintentionally:
- reduce growth
- concentrate risk
- lock income into a narrow range
This is the start of what I like to call “dividend dependency.”
Let’s say most dividend portfolios produce roughly 3–5% yields.
That can quietly turn retirement into a fixed-income lifestyle.
Because that pesky cancer called inflation never stops working in the background.
If inflation rises faster than the dividend yield, the purchasing power of your retirement savings slowly shrinks.
And our strategy is designed around giving clients flexibility.
There’s nothing worse than seeing someone who’s worked their entire life end up trapped in a rigid income structure that slowly erodes their lifestyle.
Because you don’t want to be backed into a corner where you have no options.
Retirees who have flexibility can adjust to life's surprises.
When a prospective client comes to see me, I may or may not recommend that individual own dividend-paying companies as part of their retirement portfolio.
Why?
Because everyone’s situation is completely different.
This is where the PKAG Four-Bucket Strategy comes in.
Instead of treating dividends as the income solution, they should be:
one component of your Growth Bucket.
At PKAG, we structure portfolios across four areas:
Income – predictable cash flow for retirement spending
Growth – investments designed to extend the life of your retirement
Health – planning for unexpected healthcare costs
Legacy – preserving wealth for the next generation
Dividends often live inside the Growth Bucket, not the Income Bucket.
Because retirement income needs to be:
- Nimble
- Dynamic
- Adjustable
Matched to what you want to do.
Withdrawals should be driven by the overall retirement plan, not by whatever dividend a company happens to pay.
What Are the Hidden Dangers of Dividend Strategies?
Sector Concentration
Dividend payers often cluster in sectors like:
- Banks
- Utilities
- Telecom
That means a dividend-focused portfolio can quietly become concentrated in just a few industries.
Home-Country Bias
Canada incentivizes domestic dividend investing through the dividend tax credit.
But globally, some of the strongest dividend companies are outside Canada.
Examples include companies like Apple or JPMorgan.
This creates a conflict between tax efficiency and global diversification.
Dividends Can Be Emotional
When I meet an investor who tells me to invest in a company, they often show me a number and say:
“Look at this yield.”
After meeting many investors, I’ve noticed something.
Many fall in love with the yield number, not the business itself.
The real questions should be:
- What is the economic thesis of the company?
- Is management allocating capital responsibly?
- Is the company financially healthy and does it have a sustainable future?
Warning signs matter more than the dividend percentage.
A high dividend yield can actually be a warning signal rather than a reward.
Income Sources Ranked by How Markets Reward Them
Capital Gains
Highest potential because it requires long-term participation in business growth.
Dividends
A share of company profits.
Interest
Compensation for lending money.
Each of these plays a role in a diversified retirement portfolio.
Dividends Are a Tool, Not the Toolbox
Dividends are not the villain.
But they’re also not the retirement solution many people believe they are.
They are a tool, not the toolbox itself.
A strong retirement plan blends:
- Growth
- Income
- Flexibility
- Tax strategy
Retirement should be about using the whole toolbox to build your future.
Otherwise, every problem starts to look like a nail.
Want to build your retirement house on a stronger foundation? Register for our next seminar here



