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Johnson & Johnson and PepsiCo are elite Dividend Kings.
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Realty Income has a terrific record of increasing its monthly dividend.
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Chevron and Brookfield Renewable have lots of fuel to continue increasing their attractive dividends.
Dividend stocks can be great long-term investments. Many top dividend payers have long histories of increasing their payouts and delivering above-average total returns.
Here are five excellent dividend stocks to consider holding for the next five years.
Brookfield Renewable (NYSE: BEPC)(NYSE: BEP) is a leading global renewable energy producer. The company sells the clean power it generates under long-term, fixed-rate power purchase agreements (PPAs) with utilities and large corporate customers. These agreements produce stable and growing cash flows supported by inflation-linked rate increases.
Growing power demand should benefit Brookfield over the next five years. The company expects to capture higher prices as legacy PPAs expire, complete a growing pipeline of renewable energy development projects, and make value-enhancing acquisitions. These catalysts should drive more than 10% compound annual growth in its per-share funds from operations (FFO) for the foreseeable future. That supports Brookfield’s plan to increase its dividend by 5% to 9% annually.
It has delivered at least 5% annual dividend growth for 14 straight years. With its dividend currently yielding more than 4%, and robust growth ahead, Brookfield could produce powerful total returns in the coming years.
Realty Income (NYSE: O) is one of the world’s largest real estate investment trusts (REITs). It owns a diversified portfolio of high-quality properties leased to many of the world’s leading companies. The REIT’s long-term net leases provide it with very durable cash flow because tenants cover all property operating costs, including routine maintenance, real estate taxes, and building insurance.
The landlord pays a monthly dividend currently yielding over 5.5%. Realty Income has increased its payment 131 times since coming public in 1994. Acquisitions drive its steadily rising dividend.
With an elite balance sheet and strong excess free cash flow after paying dividends, Realty Income has ample financial flexibility to continue growing its portfolio and dividend. And, with over $14 trillion of real estate suitable for net leases across the U.S. and Europe, it has a very long growth runway ahead.
Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) has one of the healthiest financial profiles in the world. It boasts a pristine credit rating (AAA) due to its fortress balance sheet and strong free cash flow. Last year, the company produced $20 billion in free cash flow even after spending heavily on research and development (it’s one of the world’s top R&D investors). That was more than enough to cover its 3%-yielding dividend ($11.8 billion paid out last year). The company has been using its strong free cash flow and balance sheet to make strategic acquisitions ($15 billion deployed over the past year).