3 Dividend-Growth Stocks To Power Your Retirement Portfolio

 | Jun 19, 2020 09:51AM ET

If you’re among those savers who have to plan for their retirement journey solo, then unfortunately, you won’t find many high-yielding opportunities to earn a decent income stream. 

In an environment of persistently low interest rates, savings accounts pay close to zilch, while the return on government bonds has been extremely small. This situation is unlikely to change any time soon, as governments and central banks keep interest rates at, or near, zero to shore up the economy against the fall-out from the pandemic. 

However, investing in dividend-growth stocks offers one way to build up wealth for your golden years. Companies that offer regular dividend increases tend to run mature businesses that could provide stability and growth for your portfolio. Keeping these benefits in mind, we've picked three dividend-growth stocks to consider.

h2 1. Procter & Gamble/h2

Consumer staple giant Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG), is a great income-stock worth stashing in a buy-and-hold portfolio, where it can sit quietly and earn growing pay-outs for an investor. P&G stock, which closed yesterday at $118, currently yields 2.68%. It has increased its dividends for 61 consecutive years, a track record few companies can match.

This consistent dividend growth also shows how powerful the company’s cash-flow generation is. Its range of products, which includes such globally recognized brands as Pampers diapers, Tide laundry detergent, and Charmin toilet paper, is strong enough to sustain revenue growth through wars, recessions and market downturns. 

The strength of P&G’s consumer brands was evident during the current health crisis. The consumer giant has been among the few companies that has maintained their full-year earnings guidance throughout the pandemic, benefiting from the panic-buying of toilet paper and cleaning products, as the COVID-19 virus spread.

With a pay-out ratio of 66%, the company has enough space to continue growing its income stream for investors. Over the past decade, pay-outs have doubled to $0.79 per share quarterly.