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5 High Growth Dividend Paying Companies

Analysts are constantly using quantitative screens to search the stock universe for what is the best-performing category. I personally look for past performances and I agree that each stock with a wonderful past performance give me a better feeling when I put money into the stock or company.

There is also a great lack of fast rising dividends.

High-dividend growth is the growth between trailing four-quarter total common dividends and the year-ago trailing four-quarter total. 

Here are the five companies with the highest percentage of dividend growth over that time. Maybe you find some interesting names on the selection.

These are the results:

7 Best Dividend Aristocrats To Consider

I recently dug into the list of dividend aristocrats and looked for the best potential among this group of income investments, zeroing in on seven top stocks that I think offer investors both stability in their share price, as well as a robust dividend.

Dividend stocks with reliable dividends are a good fundament for small pocket investors. For sure, you don't might to earn the 20+ percent yearly that might Warren Buffett catch but a 6-12 percent return is a better alternative that low yields from 10 Year Treasuries.

If you’re looking for the best dividend aristocrats to buy now — for both current yield, share potential and future dividend growth — I’ve identified seven worth a look. Here they are:

16 Dividend Paying Mega Caps And Which Are The Cheapest

I like big companies because they often have a huge cash flow and broad diversification for self-repairment.

It's often not correct, especially when you think at the Tech sector. Apple was the only turn-around story I remember.

Today I like to introduce 16 mega capitalized dividend paying companies. Apple dominates the list with a 740 billion market cap and still has a cheap P/E of 13.2. That's unbelievable but do you trust them over the long-term?

However, don't fall in love with a single stock. Just diversify and keep the big risks out of your portfolio. That's what I say.

Attached is a full and detailed list of the 16 mega caps with important fundamentals.

These are the 7 cheapest mega caps:

27 Dividend Growers Of The Past Week (CMI, KMI, SJM, COP, OHI ...)

As dividend growth investor, I do look at fresh dividend hike in order to identify the next Dividend King.

During the past Week 27 companies raised dividends of which six pay yields over five percent. Below is a snapshot of the 18 midcaps+, stocks with a market cap over 2 billion.


Dividend Growers Of The Past Week (click to enlarge)

I like Cummis, J.M. Smucker, Carnival, Agilent and Goldman Sachs. Which are your favorites.

Here are all dividend growth picks of the recent week.



Company
Ticker
New Yield
Dividend Growth
Goldman Sachs Pfd. A
GS+A
 4.77
 1.11
Goldman Sachs Pfd. C
GS+C
 4.84
 1.11
Goldman Sachs Pfd. D
GS+D
 4.95
 1.11
Ryder System
R
 1.79
 10.81
Bank of America Dep pfd L
BMLL
 4.79
 3.37
Select Income REIT
SIR
 9.12
 45.18
Cummins
CMI
 3.00
 25.00
Education Realty Trust
EDR
 4.54
 2.78
Healthcare Services Group
HCSG
 2.15
 0.70
Saratoga Investment
SAR
 7.72
 22.22
West Pharmaceutical Svcs
WST
 0.79
 9.09
Ala Pwr 5.83% O pfd.
ALPO
 5.52
 0.01
Codorus Valley Bancorp
CVLY
 2.60
 4.00
CONE Midstream Partners
CNNX
 5.12
 3.53
Kinder Morgan
KMI
 5.24
 2.08
National Retail Prperties
NNN
 4.68
 3.57
Omega Hlthcare Investors
OHI
 6.16
 1.85
Antero Midstream Partners
AM
 2.74
 5.56
Bassett Furniture Inds
BSET
 0.98
 12.50
Carnival
CCL
 2.30
 20.00
ConocoPhillips
COP
 5.17
 1.37
HealthSouth Cp
HLS
 2.03
 9.52
JM Smucker
SJM
 2.47
 4.69
Penske Automotive
PAG
 1.81
 4.35
SunCoke Energy
SXC
 5.05
 100.00
Tallgrass Energy Partners
TEP
 5.19
 11.54
Two River Bancorp
TRCB
 1.54
 16.67
Value Line
VALU
 5.66
 6.67

5 Buy And Hold Forever Dividend Stocks With Initial Yields Over 3%

Whether you look back to the European debt crisis of 2011 or the mortgage meltdown of 2008, long-term investors with a focus on high-quality stocks are nearly always made whole — and often come out significantly ahead on a total-return basis.

Particularly if you’re at or near retirement and focusing on income, you need to think about where stocks are going to be in a decade or two instead of a month or two.

That’s because hiding out in cash doesn’t give you much to live on, while long-term bond funds may expose you to considerable interest-rate risks.

The answer for many investors, then, is to rely on stable dividend payers that have strong operations that enable them to weather anything the market throws their way and sustain their dividends even during a downturn. Here are five such “forever stocks” I think investors should consider. 

Each of the results pay a minimum dividend yield of more than 3 percent. It's important not to count on stocks that start with 1 percent.

These are the results: