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5 Consistently Growing, Profitable, Well-capitalized Stocks With Ever-Increasing Dividend Yields

Sectors with consistent dividends – most notably, utilities – are treated like bonds and tend to do well in low-rate environments. That’s because yields move in the opposite direction of price. But when rates rise, prices fall. 

What I'm looking for are companies that are consistently growing, consistently profitable, well-capitalized, as well as with an ever-increasing dividend yield.


In additon, it's good to look for companies that have consistency like consumer staple companied.


Here are some of the stocks with ever growing sales in the past.

20 Highest Yielding Solid Ex-Dividend Stocks Of The Next Week

Attached is a list of the highest yielding stocks that go ex-dividend within the upcoming week.  The full list can be found here: Ex-Dividend Stocks Of The Next Week July 13 – 19, 2015. The attached list exclude all stocks with a market cap below 2 billion USD.

I like Shaw Communications, a Canadian Cable, Telekom and Televison stock. In addition, Caterpillar, Abbvie, CBRL, Buckle, Yum Brankds, Abott and Wipro are looking good.

The general problem is for me the crisis in Europe and the ongoing sell-off in China. Both could be essential events for a possible market correction in the U.S. Economy.

Below is a current stock list of dividend stocks (common shares, preferred shares and American Depositary Receipts – ADR’s), paying forthcoming dividends and having their ex-dividend within the week July 13, 2015 – July 19, 2015. The average dividend-yield amounts to 8.48 percent.


High-Yield Ex-Dividend Stocks Of The Next Week

7 High Yielding Qualitity Income Stocks

Traditionally high quality has been strongly re-rated versus low quality during economic downswings. Screening for quality but combining this with a dividend yield strategy is less volatile, even more profitable and has historically delivered an annualized alpha of 7.2%.

Here are 7 Stocks that offer a quality income with a respectable Yield from the crisis continent Europe.

This income stocks screen is designed to help investors avoid those companies that are most likely to cut their dividends. The screen includes companies with a dividend yield (consensus estimate for next-12-months) greater than 4% and weak balance sheets. The universe is based on FTSE World Developed and FTSE 350 stocks, and all financial companies are excluded.

Here are the top results:

10 Monthly Dividend Paying Dogs

Dividend stockholders of quarterly, semi-annual and annual pay modalities anxiously await announcements from a firm, fund, or analyst to learn if their next dividend will be higher, lower, or paid at all. 

Monthly pay stocks, funds, trusts, and partnerships inform the holder every four and one third weeks by check and/or statement. If the entity reduces or suspends a payment, the holder can cancel their investment immediately to cut future losses.

Let’s combine monthly paying stocks with an established investment theory, the dogs of the dow strategy.

Those are stocks that pay you monthly dividends and having a high yield with a growing expected EPS. The system works to find bargains in any collection of dividend paying stocks. The use of analyst price upside estimates expanded the stock universe to include popular growth equities, as desired.

Below I’ve attached some of the top monthly dividend paying dogs...

9 Top Picks From Goldman's Dividend Growth Basket

Dividends are so important for income investors, especially when you reinvest all of your fresh dividend payment to fund new stock positions.

Overall, dividends will provide about half the total returns for equity investors in the next decade, that's a major guide each analyst tells you when we are discussing the dividend growth strategies.

Today I like to refer a great basket from Goldman Sachs, the Dividend Growth Basket. Each stock of the list has a median yield of 2.5% and is expected to increase dividends by 16% in 2015 and 12% in 2016. The basket has a price-to-earnings ratio of 15 vs. 17.3 for the S&P.

That sounds very interesting, right? Well let us look at the detailed results. Here are the best picks from each industry. Which do you like?