This group of dividend stocks could be the greatest investment strategy of all time… take a look at the Dividend Aristocrats and their consistent dividend increases!
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Dividend Stocks, Dividend Aristocrats, Fallen Aristocrats, New Aristocrats, Dividend Yields
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The Greatest Investments for Dividends EVER?
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2. Welcome to Dividend Stocks Research Your premier site for Rankings and Reviews of the best dividends stocks around. For more info on dividend stocks visit our website
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3. Hi, My names Aaron and I‘m with Dividend Stocks Research, and today were reviewing our recently published article…
5. Dividend stocks are a great investment… but could they be some of the greatest investments EVER? When it comes to dividend stocks, as an investor consistencymatters.
You want a consistent track record of dividends not just being paid, but also dividend growth.
6. When this dividend growth takes place quarter after quarter and year after year, a company solidifies its position, and earns a well-deserved reputation.
8. Dividend Aristocrats are Dividend stocks that are in the S&P 500 and have increased their dividend payouts for 25 years or more… to say it’s an elite group is an understatement.
9. Investors tend to think of dividend stocks as value stocks, and in many cases this is accurate. But the Aristocrats can include a handful of growth stocks, which we don’t often associate with consistent and growing dividends.
10. The Dividend Aristocrats typically deliver a total return, including both dividends and price appreciation, that outperforms the broader market.
11. The consistent performance and pattern of a company that reliably pays a growing dividend allows a stock to become what is known as a Dividend Aristocrat.
12. When you think about the shifts we’ve seen in the market over the past 25 years, this is quite an accomplishment. It is why these companies command premium pricing, with P/E ratios on the high side.
13. It is also why they tend to fall into just a handful of different industries.
The Aristocrats are in ten different industries.
14. The top 3 categories are:
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Consumer Staples
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Industrials
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Health Care
When investors think about safe and reliable dividend stocks, they usually think about financial stocks or utility stock
15. But as we have seen over the past decade, both these industries have been shaken. On the 2013 lineup of Aristocrats, firms such as Wells Fargo, JP Morgan Chase, and Citigroup are missing.
16. Some of the stocks are household names. Coke, Pepsi, Wal-Mart and McDonald’s are Aristocrats.
But many of these companies aren’t so well known.
17. Pentair Ltd. (PNR)
In the business of valves, fittings, pumps, and filters. It is a Swiss company with extensive operations here in the U.S.
24. Abbott Laboratories(ABT)
Companies check in and check out on the S&P 500 lineup of dividend aristocrats. Mostly, they check out. One newcomer to the list, which made its debut in 2013, is Abbott Laboratories (ABT).
30. The market plunge in 2008 rattled more than a few Aristocrats. 24 stocks fell from the list. 12 of them were in the financial sector.
31. List of 12 Stocks
1.Bank of America (BAC)
2.Comerica (CMA)
3.Fifth Third Bancorp (FITB)
4.KeyCorp (KEY)
5.Progressive (PGR)
6.Regions Financial (RF)
7.BB&T (BBT)
8.General Electric (GE)
9.Legg Mason (LM)
10.M&T Bank (MTB)
11.State Street (STT)
12.U.S. Bancorp (USB)
32. When a stock is stripped of Aristocrat status, does this present an investor with an attractive buying opportunity?
Because the reputation of the stock has been damaged, does this mean that the underlying value has been damaged as well?
Like most things in the world of investing, the answer is, “It depends.”
33. General Electric (GE)
Most investors consider General Electric (GE) to be a well-run company with solid operations and a promising future. While it has lost its status as an Aristocrat, it has not lost its ability to pay dividends.
34. General Electric (GE)
But not every fallen Aristocrat is a GE. Some companies that stumble and are forced to cut a dividend are experiencing something more ominous that a cyclical downtown.
36. Pitney Bowes (PBI)
Take a look at Pitney Bowes (PBI), which was shown to the exit in 2013. The firm was founded in 1920 and had been an Aristocrat for years.
On Apr. 30, 2013, the firm slashed its dividend payment by 50%.The stock took an immediate hit, instantly plunging 10%.
37. Pitney Bowes(PBI)
Even though the stock has crawled back from its 2013 lows, this is clearly a firm that is in trouble. It is literally watching its business vanish.
38. Pitney Bowes(PBI)
As fewer pieces of snail mail go through the postal system because of email, and as the demand for metered mail slides, Pitney Bowes is witnessing the evaporation of its core business. It remains to be seen if its attempts to offer digital solutions will prove profitable.
41. Proctor and Gamble(PG)
Whether it’s Tide detergent or a Gillette razor, most of us have a Procter & Gamble product or two in the house.
42. Proctor and Gamble(PG)
And most investors who depend on reliable dividend payments have some P&G in their portfolio. P&G has been paying dividends since the company was launched in 1890. The firm has been increasing its dividend every year since 1956.
43. Proctor and Gamble(PG)
The P&G dividend yield is 3.15% and the payout ratio is 61.1%.
P&G has recently been one of the higher yielding Aristocrats. The yields for the Aristocrats are typically in the 1-3% range.
44. Proctor and Gamble(PG)
High yields are difficult to achieve, and even more difficult to maintain, so it is rare to see an Aristocrat with a yield higher than 4%.
50. This ETF tracks the S&P High Yield Dividend Aristocrats Index. It follows roughly 60 stocks, all high- quality companies where the dividend has been increased for at least 25 years in a row.
A similar ETF is the ProSharesS&P 500 Aristocrats ETF (NOBL).