4 Dividend Raisers Yielding Up To 8.8%

 | Jul 02, 2021 05:03AM ET

For the past few weeks, I’ve been drawing up a roadmap of how income investors like us can fend off inflation’s impending march.

Utility stocks.

But they all center around one central theme you can find in just about any corner of the market: dividend growth. Show me a payout that is heading higher, and I’ll point you to a stock price that is likely to follow.

We’ve got a big summer ahead, with 48 dividend raises on the way! Here’s why these stocks are must-watches for the months ahead.

h2 Why We All Need Bigger Dividends Over Time/h2

It’s simple math.

Right now, if you were to lock in current rates for some of the market’s most popular investments, you’d lock in a retirement devoid of breathing room and full of financial anxiety.

Let’s say you had a million-dollar nest egg to plunk down on whatever you wanted:

  • The S&P 500? That’d net you just $13,400 in annual income.
  • 10-year Treasuries? Try $14,800.
  • Even a “high-yield” ETF like Vanguard’s VYM would deliver just $28,200 in annual income—that’s certainly better, but is less than $30k a year going to deliver you anything close to the retirement experience you worked so hard for?

Meanwhile, every day, inflation is eating into the spending power of the few meager dollars you’re earning from each of those investments. But your yield-on-cost for Treasuries won’t change, and while the payouts on the S&P 500 and VYM do improve over time, both have many components that boast little or even no dividend growth.

We need to do better, and we can, by stacking our portfolio with reliable, generous income raisers.

h2 The Dividend Magnet/h2

The “dividend magnet” is one of my favorite market effects—and the other reason why it’s so important to prioritize dividend growth.

In short, dividend growth begets stock-price growth.

Some “first-level” investors love to say that the start of dividends is the end of growth—that a dividend-paying company has run out of ways to innovate, so they’re tossing cash to investors in a desperate move to maintain shareholder interest.

But in reality? A new dividend program is a statement of confidence and financial stability. A company that pays dividends says, “We know we’re going to continue to be profitable, and we’re going to share the riches with you along the way.” When it hikes those dividends, a company is doubling down on that sentiment, telling investors to expect even better financial performance ahead.

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And investors typically take those signals as a bright, green light.

Just consider Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX), which started paying dividends in 2010, then proceeded to nearly triple the S&P 500 over the next decade-plus.

h2 Does It Look Like Starbucks’ Growth Stopped?