Following a painful 2022 for the S&P 500, when the heavily weighted technology and communications sectors led a double-digit decline, this year’s recovery has been breathtaking. But lately, investors have been nervous and those sectors have been pulling back as long-term interest rates have risen, despite the Federal Reserve’s pause in raising short-term rates. Some professional investors are worried that rising long-term rates could push the broad stock market down again. And that means it might be time for you to consider more exposure to dividend stocks, which fared quite well during 2022.
Below are screens of the S&P Dividend Aristocrats, broadly defined by three approaches developed by S&P Dow Jones Indices.
Related: Why dividend-growing stocks could be better bets than their higher-yielding peers
Let’s start with two charts. All investment returns in this article include reinvested dividends. Here’s how the S&P 500
has performed this year, along with its information technology and communications services sectors:
The communications sector is heavily weighted to big tech, as it includes Alphabet Inc.
GOOGL,
whose Class A shares have risen 48% this year, and Meta Platforms Inc.
META,
which is up 147% for 2023.
To the right of the chart you can see the recent action for the broad market has been weak, with sharp declines for the two sectors.
Now let’s move over to exchange-traded funds’ performance in 2022 for the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust
,
along with three ETFs that track different groups of S&P Dividend Aristocrats:
-
The ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats ETF
tracks the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats Index
.
This index includes 67 companies in the S&P 500 that have increased their dividend payouts for at least 25 consecutive years when the index is reconstituted and each January. That is the only criterion — it makes no difference how high or low a stock’s current dividend yield might be. The index is equal-weighted, with a 30% cap for any one of the 11 S&P sectors. The index is again rebalanced every April, July and October. - The ProShares S&P MidCap 400 Dividend Aristocrats ETF REGL tracks the S&P 400 Dividend Aristocrats Index, which is made up of 47 stocks in the S&P 400 Mid Cap Index MID that have increased dividends for at least 15 straight years. It follows the same modified equal-weighted approach.
-
The SPDR S&P Dividend ETF SDY tracks the S&P High Yield Dividend Aristocrats Index XX:SPHYDA. This index is made up of the 121 Stocks in the S&P Composite 1500 Index that have raised dividends for at least 20 consecutive years. The S&P Composite 1500 is a combination of the S&P 500, the S&P Mid Cap 400 and the S&P 600 Small Cap Index
.
This means the S&P High Yield Dividend Aristocrats Index includes all the stocks in the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats Index, but it excludes some that are in the S&P 400 Dividend Aristocrats Index. The name of the High Yield Dividend Aristocrats Index is confusing because the yields may not be high — they range from 0.20 % to 9.13%.
Here’s how the three Dividend Aristocrat ETFs performed, along with SPY, last year:
All three Dividend Aristocrats fared much better than the broad market in 2022, with REGL and SDY holding up particularly well. So far this year, NOBL is flat, while REGL is down 5% and SDY is down 6%.
Screening the Dividend Aristocrats
If we add the three groups of Dividend Aristocrats, which partially overlap as described above, we have a group of 137 stocks. Let’s screen them three ways — by current dividend yield, an analysis of five-year dividend compounding and current sentiment among analysts working for brokerage firms.
Highest-yielding Dividend Aristocrats
A dozen Dividend Aristocrats have current dividend yields of 5.00% or higher:
Company | Ticker | Current dividend yield | 2023 total return | 5-year total return |
Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. | WBA | 9.13% | -41% | -65% |
Leggett & Platt Incorporated | LEG | 7.47% | -20% | -30% |
Nu Skin Enterprises Inc. Class A | NUS | 7.42% | -48% | -69% |
NNN REIT Inc. | NNN | 6.48% | -21% | 1% |
3M Company | MMM | 6.42% | -19% | -46% |
UGI Corp. | UGI | 6.27% | -34% | -49% |
Realty Income Corp. | O | 6.19% | -19% | 14% |
Avista Corp. | AVA | 5.69% | -24% | -22% |
Amcor PLC | AMCR | 5.43% | -21% | N/A |
United Bankshares Inc. | UBSI | 5.34% | -31% | -8% |
NorthWestern Corp. | NWE | 5.25% | -15% | 4% |
Spire Inc. | SR | 5.12% | -15% | -7% |
Source: FactSet |
Click on the tickers for more about each company, ETF or index.
Click here for Tomi Kilgore’s detailed guide to the wealth of information available for free on the MarketWatch quote page.
There is no five-year return for Amcor PLC
AMCR
because the company was listed under the current ticker on the New York Stock Exchange in 2019 after it acquired Bemis Co.
Note the weak total returns for all the stocks on the first screen list. A very high dividend yield can be a warning, even for a Dividend Aristocrat, that professional investors aren’t confident a company will maintain its payout.
For a second screen, let’s consider dividend increases by looking at compound annual growth rates for dividend payouts (CAGR) over the past five years. Let’s begin with stocks whose yields were at least 1.5% as of Sept. 27, 2018.
For example, if you had purchased shares of Automatic Data Processing Inc.
ADP
at the close on Sept. 27, 2018, you would have paid $149.91 for your shares. At that time, the quarterly dividend was 69 cents a share, for an annual payout of $2.76 a share. The dividend yield at that time was 1.84%. As of the close on Wednesday, the share price was $242.63 and the quarterly dividend had increased to $1.25, or $5 annually. So the current dividend yield at Wednesday’s close was 2.06%, but the yield on your five-year-old shares would be 3.34%. The share price increased 62% over the five-year period and the total return, with dividends reinvested, was 80%. The dividend increased at a CAGR of 12.6% for the five-year period.
If we screen our full list of 137 Dividend Aristocrats for companies whose dividend yields were at least 1.5% five years ago, we narrow the group to 97 companies.
Here are the 10 with the highest five-year dividend CAGR, 13 grew payouts at an annual pace of at least 10%:
Company | Ticker | Five-year dividend CAGR | Dividend yield on shares purchased five years ago | Current dividend yield | Dividend yield – five years ago | 2023 total return | 5-year total return |
Lowe’s Cos. Inc. | LOW | 18.0% | 3.84% | 2.13% | 1.68% | 5% | 98% |
Microchip Technology Inc. | MCHP | 17.6% | 4.17% | 2.14% | 1.85% | 10% | 110% |
Williams-Sonoma Inc. | WSM | 15.9% | 5.50% | 2.29% | 2.63% | 40% | 172% |
Abbott Laboratories | ABT | 12.7% | 2.79% | 2.14% | 1.53% | -12% | 42% |
Automatic Data Processing Inc. | ADP | 12.6% | 3.34% | 2.06% | 1.84% | 3% | 80% |
Bank OZK | OZK | 12.5% | 3.76% | 3.96% | 2.09% | -7% | 13% |
Fastenal Co. | FAST | 11.8% | 4.82% | 2.54% | 2.76% | 19% | 116% |
T. Rowe Price Group | TROW | 11.8% | 4.43% | 4.71% | 2.54% | -2% | 12% |
Target Corp. | TGT | 11.4% | 5.03% | 4.01% | 2.93% | -25% | 41% |
NextEra Energy Inc. | NEE | 11.0% | 4.52% | 3.12% | 2.68% | -27% | 62% |
L3Harris Technologies Inc. | LHX | 10.7% | 2.73% | 2.60% | 1.64% | -14% | 15% |
Lincoln Electric Holdings Inc. | LECO | 10.4% | 2.72% | 1.42% | 1.66% | 26% | 110% |
Aflac Inc. | AFL | 10.1% | 3.57% | 2.18% | 2.21% | 9% | 85% |
Source: FactSet |
Eight companies passing the second screen have beaten the S&P 500’s five-year total return of 60%.
The third screen reflects positive sentiment among analysts working for brokerage firms who have been polled by FactSet. Here are the 15 Aristocrats with a majority “buy” or equivalent ratings, with the highest 12-month upside potential implied by consensus price targets:
Company | Ticker | Share “buy” ratings | Sept. 27 price | Consensus price target | Implied 12-month upside potential | Dividend yield |
Albemarle Corp, | ALB | 81% | $162.63 | $262.53 | 61% | 0.98% |
Perrigo Co. PLC | PRGO | 100% | $31.49 | $48.50 | 54% | 3.47% |
Essential Utilities Inc. | WTRG | 80% | $34.34 | $50.75 | 48% | 3.58% |
NextEra Energy, Inc. | NEE | 76% | $59.96 | $84.00 | 40% | 3.12% |
Regal Rexnord Corp. | RRX | 86% | $142.36 | $196.00 | 38% | 0.98% |
Nike Inc. Class B | NKE | 63% | $89.42 | $122.90 | 37% | 1.52% |
Realty Income Corp. | O | 53% | $49.66 | $67.43 | 36% | 6.19% |
L3Harris Technologies Inc. | LHX | 54% | $175.20 | $229.95 | 31% | 2.60% |
Sysco Corp. | SYY | 56% | $65.21 | $85.43 | 31% | 3.07% |
Abbott Laboratories | ABT | 72% | $95.53 | $124.02 | 30% | 2.14% |
Archer-Daniels-Midland Co. | ADM | 53% | $76.36 | $98.82 | 29% | 2.36% |
Microchip Technology Inc. | MCHP | 65% | $76.50 | $98.10 | 28% | 2.14% |
Coca-Cola Co. | KO | 76% | $55.95 | $70.12 | 25% | 3.29% |
McDonald’s Corp. | MCD | 74% | $263.64 | $329.90 | 25% | 2.31% |
Prosperity Bancshares Inc. | PB | 67% | $52.86 | $65.43 | 24% | 4.16% |
Source: FactSet |
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