First Trust Exchange-Traded Fund VI First Trust NASDAQ Technology Dividend Index Fund

TDIV
$98.06 +0.01 (0.01%)
Dividend Yield 1.39%
Payout Frequency Quarterly

Dividend History

Pay DateAmountEx-DateRecord Date
December 31, 2025$0.492025-12-122025-12-12
September 30, 2025$0.282025-09-252025-09-25
June 30, 2025$0.322025-06-262025-06-26
March 31, 2025$0.272025-03-272025-03-27
December 31, 2024$0.452024-12-132024-12-13

Dividends Summary

Company News

Is Now the Time to Invest in the TDIV ETF After Mainstay Capital Bought Shares Worth $94.8 Million?
The Motley Fool • Robert Izquierdo • December 14, 2025

Mainstay Capital Management purchased $94.8 million worth of shares in the First Trust NASDAQ Technology Dividend Index Fund (TDIV), signaling potential bullish sentiment on technology and telecom dividend-paying stocks, particularly in the context of AI market expansion.

S&P Global Uses IBM AI To Boost Efficiency
Benzinga • Lekha Gupta • October 8, 2025

IBM and S&P Global announced a partnership to integrate watsonx Orchestrate AI framework into S&P Global's product portfolio, enhancing decision-making tools for clients across procurement, trade, and risk management.

Why IBM Shares Are Seeing Blue Skies On Tuesday?
Benzinga • Lekha Gupta • October 7, 2025

IBM announced a strategic partnership with Anthropic to advance enterprise-grade AI, integrating Claude LLMs into IBM's software suite. The collaboration aims to boost productivity and enhance software development with new AI tools and platforms.

IBM's TP Software Stays 'Extremely Relevant' To Growth, Even In The Public Cloud Age: Analyst
Benzinga • Lekha Gupta • May 29, 2025

B of A analyst Wamsi Mohan maintained a Buy rating on IBM, citing the company's defensive nature, growth potential, and the crucial role of its Transaction Processing software, driven by WatsonX integration and flexible pricing strategies.

Worried About a Recession? 5 Money Moves All Retirees Should Consider, Just in Case
The Motley Fool • The Motley Fool • March 18, 2025

The article provides 5 money moves retirees should consider to weather a potential recession, including maintaining cash savings, reducing spending, diversifying investments, paying off high-interest debt, and optimizing Social Security benefits.

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