3 Dividend Stocks To Fuel Growth In Your Retirement Income

 | Sep 08, 2022 02:21PM ET

  • Dividend-paying stocks have become more important for retirement portfolios when inflation is high, and bond prices are falling
  • Large companies that have a long history of paying dividends can weather an inflationary environment better than other asset classes
  • Companies with strong cash flows that consistently grow dividends by 5% to 10% every year are generally suitable for a long-term portfolio
  • If your goal as an investor is building a solid income stream for your retirement years, you should look for stocks worth holding over the long run, focusing on their income-generating capabilities.

    As inflation runs near a four-decade high and the bond market tumbles, income-producing or dividend-paying stocks become even more critical for your retirement portfolio.

    According to S&P Dow Jones Indices and Bureau of Economic Analysis data, cited by the Wall Street Journal, dividends as a share of personal income climbed to 7.3% in the first quarter of this year from 3.2% in the first quarter of 1980. Interest income as a share of personal income declined to 9.2% from 16.2% over the same period.

    Large companies with a history of paying dividends each year can benefit from an inflationary environment like the one we’re facing now. The products and services these companies produce are so essential that consumers are generally willing to pay higher prices.

    Buying stocks of such companies is a great way to protect your long-term purchasing power when the prices of goods and services increase. A portfolio of stocks with strong cash flows that consistently grow dividends by 5% to 10% every year is the type of company I find suitable for a long-term retirement portfolio.

    Keeping these benefits in mind, I’ve picked the following three stocks that could offer growth and regular income for your retirement portfolio.

    h2 1. McDonald’s/h2

    For health-conscious investors, McDonald’s Corporation (NYSE:MCD) may not be the right place to go, but the global fast-food chain is the kind of company that ticks almost all the boxes you should look for in a company add to your retirement portfolio.