Why Aren't All Income Investors Doing This?

If you follow the popular investing media, then you've likely heard a lot about the benefits of diversification in a stock portfolio.

One or two losers in a basket of stocks won't significantly drag down the overall performance; you'll sleep better at night knowing your portfolio won't need to be watched around the clock, and the overall returns will likely keep pace with -- or beat -- the overall market.

But if you're an income investor, then maybe you think the advantages that diversification can offer somehow don't apply. After all, most investment advisors lump all income assets into the same class.

However, you can have a more diversified income portfolio while reaping all those same benefits.

First, consider the choices. Income equities fall into three broad categories:

Then, consider the mix.

You wouldn't put your entire nest egg into only those equities that offer the highest payouts. After all, it's these riskier assets usually fall the hardest at the first sign of trouble.

At the same time, you also wouldn't maximize your income portfolio's potential by holding only more established, but lower-yielding dividend payers -- especially at a time when the average yield in the S&P 500 is a miserly 2%.

The solution? A blend of all of the above.

Equities with a solid history of growing their dividends will temper the risks of the high yielders. Meanwhile, a selection of stable payers will provide a solid performance in virtually any investment climate.

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The question then, really, is which income investments to pick for each of these categories. And that's where Amy Calistri can help.

Amy refers to it as her "Daily Paycheck" strategy.

At the core of Amy's strategy is diversity -- the blending of a bevy of dividend-paying stocks into three distinct portfolios that work together to minimize risk and maximize income.

The Daily Paycheck's "Fast Dividend Growers" portfolio, for instance, contains holdings suited for a longer time horizon. These equities tend to offer the lowest yields of the three portfolios, but what they lack in income, they typically make up for in appreciation... and dividend growth.

Case in point: Magellan Midstream Partners (NYSE: MMP), a master limited partnership (MLP) that has raised its dividend a whopping 584% since 2001 -- and 40% since January 2010 alone.

The Tulsa-based oil distributor's yield is low by Daily Paycheck standards -- 3.9%, compared with an overall average yield of 6.7% across all of Amy's holdings. However, Magellan's price has appreciated 180% since Amy first purchased the MLP in February 2010. Overall, the average capital appreciation in the "Fast Dividend Growers" portfolio is 55%.