The 4 Newest Dividend Aristocrats – Contrarian Outlook (2024)

Brett Owens, Chief Investment Strategist
Updated: April 11, 2016

A couple of weeks ago, I discussed the value of investing in the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats, the 50 companies in the index that have hiked their dividends for at least 25 consecutive years.

It boils down to performance: in the last decade, this vaunted group has returned an average of 10.3% a year (including dividends), compared to just 6.3% for the S&P 500 as a whole.

The 4 Newest Dividend Aristocrats – Contrarian Outlook (1)

It’s also a list that doesn’t change much. Last year, there was just one adjustment, and it was a removal, after Family Dollar Stores was taken over by Dollar Tree (DLTR).

But in the next 14 months, four companies will punch their tickets to this elite club. Should you invest in them? Here, from worst to first, is my take on the Dividend Aristocrats “class of 2016.”

Linear Technology: Reboot Needed

Analog chipmaker Linear Technology (LLTC) raised its dividend for the 24th straight year in February, making it eligible to enter the pantheon of Dividend Aristocrats in early 2017. The stock currently yields 2.9%.

That’s the good news. The bad? The market for analog chips, which are used in everything from cars to digital cameras, is highly competitive and fragmented. The largest player, Texas Instruments (TXN), controls 18%, compared to just 3% for Linear.

That means the company will have to spend heavily just to hold its own, though it does improve the odds of a takeover by TI or another competitor.

Linear can only hope, because its profits are caught between tough competition and the sluggish economy: in its fiscal 2016 second quarter, earnings per share (EPS) slipped to $0.50 from $0.51 a year earlier, and the company is only expected to report EPS of $1.99 for the full year, down from $2.12 in fiscal 2015.

And if you thought a slow grower like Linear would at least be cheap, you’d be wrong. Its forward P/E ratio clocks in at 22.8, well above Texas Instruments (19.3) and its five-year average (20.5).

Praxair: Sales Vaporized

Praxair Inc. (PX) also marked its 24th straight dividend hike earlier this year. The stock yields 2.7%, and a 25th increase next spring looks like a slam-dunk, thanks to its reasonable 52.9% payout ratio (or the percentage of earnings paid out as dividends).

The company supplies industrial gases, like acetylene (for welding), helium and krypton (used to make windows and semiconductors).

But like Linear, Praxair operates a cyclical business. It also gets 45% of its sales from outside North America, so it’s being hit by the stronger greenback: in the fourth quarter, foreign exchange cut its sales by 10%.

The 4 Newest Dividend Aristocrats – Contrarian Outlook (2)

Praxair offset that with cost cuts, which helped it grow adjusted EPS by a penny, to $1.47 from $1.46. But that only goes so far: what it really needs is a manufacturing rebound—particularly in China and Brazil—and I don’t see that happening anytime soon.

General Dynamics: The Pentagon’s BFF

General Dynamics (GD) became a Dividend Aristocrat with gusto in early March, marking its 25th year of dividend hikes by announcing a 10% increase, payable in May.

Hikes like that are par for the course for the defense giant, which has raised its payout by 230% since 2006. Keeping its membership in the Dividend Aristocrat club will be a cinch: its payout ratio sits at just 29%.

The knock on General Dynamics is its reliance on the US government (57% of 2015 revenue) to buy its tanks, ships and computer systems. That’s a risk, to be sure, but with terrorist threats on the rise, I don’t see that spending slowing down anytime soon.

Wall Street is also bullish: the average analyst estimate sees EPS rising 3.2% this year and 7.4% in 2017.

Even better, these overwrought worries have dropped the stock’s forward P/E ratio to 13.8, below competitors like Raytheon (RTN), at 18.0, Rockwell Collins (COL), at 17.3, and Lockheed Martin (LMT), at 18.6.

That hasn’t been lost on General Dynamics’ board, which authorized a 10-million-share buyback in December. That’s a big plus, because fewer shares translate directly into higher EPS and share prices.

The 4 Newest Dividend Aristocrats – Contrarian Outlook (3)

The Valedictorian: Roper Technologies

Roper Technologies Inc. (ROP), my top pick among these four, has the one ingredient General Dynamics lacks: diversification.

Roper is a Florida-based industrial firm that increased its payout for the 24th consecutive time in January. Look for it to hit the magic number in January 2017.

It’s a good thing companies don’t need a high dividend yield to become Dividend Aristocrats, or Roper’s 0.68% would surely disqualify it. But that low yield masks an incredible growth story: in the past decade, the payout has jumped 410%.

The 4 Newest Dividend Aristocrats – Contrarian Outlook (4)

Roper has four main segments: medical and scientific imaging, radio-frequency ID systems (mainly used for toll roads, security cards and remote monitoring), industrial technology, and energy systems and controls.

The stock’s down 6.5% this year on worries weak oil prices will keep weighing on energy firms’ spending.

But energy is Roper’s smallest business, chipping in just 16% of its total revenue in 2015. When you strip out energy and industrial products—the two most volatile divisions—you’ll see that the others (representing 63% of total revenue between them) are going gangbusters, notching a combined 14.6% sales increase in Q4, and an 18.8% rise in operating profits.

Meantime, Roper trades at 24 times its forecast earnings over the next 12 months and just 20 times free cash flow. That’s a reasonable price in light of its growth potential, both organically and through acquisitions.

This Stock Will Raise Its Dividend 25 Times in the Next 6 Years

Roper and General Dynamics are strong picks from this year’s crop of Dividend Aristocrats, but why settle for annual dividend hikes when you can watch your payouts rise every single quarter like clockwork?

That’s what you get when you invest in the stock I’m urging my readers to buy now. It yields a sky-high 6.8% and, thanks to its regular quarterly increases, it takes just six years—not 25—to rack up 25 straight hikes.

This steady cash generator has been doing this since 2012, so it will become an unofficial Dividend Aristocrat in 2018—just two short years from now. Plus, the shares have easy 20% upside from here or better, as they’re trading for just 10 times cash flow.

And you won’t have to worry about the next downturn sideswiping your investment, because this company is locked into a trend that’s carved in stone no matter what: the graying of America.

It provides direct nursing care to older Americans—and that population is exploding, fueling skyrocketing demand for healthcare services. By 2024, national healthcare expenditures will hit $5.43 trillion, or about 20% of GDP.

This firm is cashing in on this trend and it’s growing its already-big 6.8% dividend literally every 3 months. But it will only be a matter of time before income-starved investors pick up on this reliable payer and pile in. That’s why you need to make your move now, while it’s still cheap.

Click here and I’ll give you the name of the company, the ticker, and two more stocks that are capitalizing on the biggest demographic shift in US history.

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The 4 Newest Dividend Aristocrats – Contrarian Outlook (2024)

FAQs

Which Dividend Aristocrats have the highest yield? ›

The top 7 dividend aristocrats list
TickerCompanyDividend Yield
BENFranklin Resources, Inc.5.44%
MMM3M Co.5.25%
AMCRAmcor Plc5.15%
TROWT. Rowe Price Group Inc.4.48%
3 more rows
May 1, 2024

Is it good to invest in Dividend Aristocrats? ›

Dividend Aristocrats are a special category of dividend-paying stocks with a long track record of making – and increasing – their payouts. Because of their stable and rising payouts, a collection of these dividend dynamos can form the basis of a lucrative income-paying portfolio.

What is the dog of the Dividend Aristocrats? ›

The 'Dogs Of Dividend Aristocrats' approach

The Dogs of the Dividend Aristocrats is based on the same investing strategy as the famous “Dogs of The Dow”, only with the difference that the index used is not the Dow 30, but the Dividend Aristocrats index. This index is defined by S&P indices company.

Do Dividend Aristocrats outperform S&P 500? ›

Over the long term, the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats has outperformed the S&P 500 with lower volatility, as shown by higher risk-adjusted returns.

What is the king of dividends? ›

Dividend kings are an elite group of stocks that have increased their dividends every year for at least 50 years in a row.

Which is better, dividend kings or aristocrats? ›

Dividend aristocrats are companies that have raised their dividend for 25 consecutive years or more. Dividend kings are companies that have accomplished the same feat for 50 years or more. It's a myopic approach. I recently did a small study on the seven stocks with the longest streaks of dividend increases.

What is the average return of the Dividend Aristocrats? ›

Average returns
PeriodAverage annualised returnTotal return
Last year5.4%5.4%
Last 5 years2.8%14.6%
Last 10 years5.5%71.0%

What is the best blue chip dividend stock? ›

What Are the Benefits of Dividends?
StockSectorMarket Capitalization
AbbVie Inc. (ABBV)Health care$282 billion
3M Co. (MMM)Industrials$54 billion
Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM)Energy$458 billion
Sysco Corp. (SYY)Consumer defensive$37 billion
3 more rows
May 2, 2024

Can you become a millionaire from dividend stocks? ›

So, Can You Get Rich Off Of Dividends? Dividend investing can indeed be a path to building wealth over time.

Which company gives highest dividend yield? ›

Highest Dividend Yield Shares
S.No.NameDiv Yld %
1.Taparia Tools726.00
2.Coal India5.37
3.Bhansali Engg.4.25
4.O N G C4.18
23 more rows

What companies pay the highest dividend yield? ›

Top 25 High Dividend Stocks
TickerNameDividend Yield
WHRWhirlpool7.38%
EPDEnterprise Products Partners7.26%
ENBEnbridge7.20%
VZVerizon6.74%
6 more rows
Apr 19, 2024

What is the best Dividend Aristocrat ETF? ›

Best dividend ETFs
  • Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (VYM).
  • Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (SCHD).
  • WisdomTree U.S. LargeCap Dividend Fund (DLN).
  • ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats ETF (NOBL).
  • iShares Core Dividend Growth ETF (DGRO).
  • SPDR S&P Dividend ETF (SDY).
  • WisdomTree U.S. Quality Dividend Growth Fund (DGRW).

Which company has the highest dividend yield in the world? ›

World's companies with the highest dividend yields
SymbolExchangeDiv yield % TTM
TAPARIA DBSE914.95%
MMLMGL DEURONEXT344.77%
VITRO/A DBMV13.00%
LTEJSE6.91%
27 more rows

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