Javelin wrote: Those 1%'s? Yeah, they collect dividends.
Glad the tone here has changed a bunch.
Forget the 1%, they have their own games to play with things where you must be deemed a "sophisticated investor" in order to participate. Dividends are a mere fraction of their game.
More generally:
In terms of a long-term investment portfolio (not what the OP is doing here, but worth discussing), you split your investments into different risk categories: let's make it basic: high risk, low risk. When you start your investment, you put more money in the high risk portion and as you approach the date when you expect to use the money, you transition to having more in the low risk category. Low risk stuff is generally the investment strategy you've advocated: buy, hold, and keep the dividends. High risk stuff is generally (in an extreme case): buy Facebook, Google, and others, some of which you know could be losers. Hope you buy them low and hope you sell them high. Hope that the winners offset the losers. You do this because you earn more on a Google going from $85 to $600 than you earn in the same time period on the dividends from some safe utility company. More risk, but more rewards. You use the long time period of your investment to make up any losses, but as you approach the date you need the money, moving it to safe bets protects what you have, but doesn't increase it as much as when you were more open to risk.
Actively trading a stock, which is what the OP is talking about, is a different animal. Depending on your time scale, which may vary from years to milliseconds, you do research about a company, decide what price you think it's worth, and check where the stock is now. If you think the stock is valued above your valuation of the company (like the OP does about TSLA), you sell any stock you own, (or borrow some so you can sell it), because you don't want to own the stock at that price. If you think it's under valued, you buy it.(see footnote) At some point (again, depending on your time scale), you re-evaluate your opinion of the company and make a new trading decision. You're looking to make the sort of "win" on these trades that make the dividends you might realize on holding the stock look small (otherwise you'd just hold the stock!).
Stocks aren't designed for any specific "term". They're simply a slice of the company. The company sells them to generate cash. Facebook and other companies don't issue dividends because they don't have to. They can sell plenty of their stock to people who want to actively trade it. Stocks like 3M have to issue dividends because they're not about to quintuple in value and people know that. They entice people to buy their stock by offering a dividend instead of the hope for radical value changes. They're shooting for the long-term investor and distributing cash out of the company's coffers to their investors to "thank" them for holding stock.
GOOG went from 85 to 574 because of some pretty radical changes in the underlying company. MMM (3M) has gone from 77 to 88 in the same time period because not much has really changed (I'm assuming...) about their business in that time. They were a major player then, they're a major player now, and they haven't come out with any massive game changers like gmail, or cornered the market like Google search. Google rewarded investors by increasing in share value. 3M rewarded investors through dividends. Different rewards for different risks: big reward for big risk in Google (imagine if you'd invested in Excite instead), small reward for small risk in 3M.
That's about all I've got time for on this lunch break... ask away.
(footnote) Sure, you get hit with fees to buy or sell, but based on your level of trading activity, those vary widely. The more it costs you to buy or sell, the bigger the change in price you have to expect before you realize a gain. If XYZ is at $100.00 and you think it's worth $100.10, but it costs you $0.10 a share to trade it, you're not going to do it. But at $0.000001 or whatever the high-frequency traders are paying, damn right it's worth trading it. Sometimes you even get REBATES from the exchanges for "providing liquidity", but that's a whole other ball game.