I selected the fifteen dividend champions which have achieved the highest ten year dividend growth rates:
Name
|
Ticker
|
Yrs
Consecutive Div Increase
|
10
Year Annual Div Growth
|
P/E
Ratio
|
Yield
|
Div
Payout Ratio
|
Stock
Analysis
|
AFLAC
Inc.
|
AFL
|
31
|
16.8%
|
8.90
|
2.60%
|
23%
|
|
Becton
Dickinson & Co.
|
BDX
|
42
|
17.6%
|
20.50
|
1.70%
|
35%
|
|
Computer
Services Inc.
|
CSVI
|
43
|
17.0%
|
19.30
|
2.30%
|
44%
|
|
Donaldson
Company
|
DCI
|
28
|
18.4%
|
21.70
|
1.70%
|
37%
|
|
Helmerich
& Payne Inc.
|
HP
|
42
|
23.3%
|
13.10
|
3.10%
|
41%
|
|
Lowe's
Companies
|
LOW
|
52
|
29.2%
|
22.40
|
1.70%
|
38%
|
|
McDonald's
Corp.
|
MCD
|
39
|
22.8%
|
16.70
|
3.70%
|
62%
|
|
MSA
Safety Inc.
|
MSA
|
43
|
16.5%
|
22
|
2.50%
|
55%
|
|
Nucor
Corp.
|
NUE
|
41
|
22.1%
|
27.20
|
3.00%
|
82%
|
|
Raven
Industries
|
RAVN
|
28
|
19.2%
|
21.10
|
2.20%
|
46%
|
|
T.
Rowe Price Group
|
TROW
|
27
|
16.2%
|
17.40
|
2.30%
|
40%
|
|
Target
Corp.
|
TGT
|
47
|
19.8%
|
19.00
|
3.30%
|
63%
|
|
W.W.
Grainger Inc.
|
GWW
|
43
|
17.2%
|
21.60
|
1.70%
|
37%
|
|
Walgreen
Company
|
WAG
|
39
|
22.0%
|
17.50
|
2.20%
|
39%
|
|
Wal-Mart
Stores Inc.
|
WMT
|
41
|
18.0%
|
16.10
|
2.50%
|
40%
|
|
High dividend growth does not make companies automatic buys. Investors need to evaluate each company in detail, and understand where future growth will come from. A solid plan with concrete deliverables communicated from the company is just one instance of something that could propel solid dividend growth going forward. Other variables that could translate into high earnings and dividend growth include taking advantage of favorable demographic trends in healthcare, baby boomers needs for retirement saving, and the rise of the emerging markets middle class.
Investors should also take with a red flag companies whose dividend growth has been slowing down considerably in the past five years or less. Nucor (NUE) rode the boom in steel prices in the first half of the decade, only to reach a plateau at the onset of the financial crisis of 2007 – 2009. The dividend growth has been miniscule for the past five years.
Investors should also look into the valuation of each company, prior to investing. Purchasing even the best company in the world that is guaranteed to boost earnings and dividends for the next 10 years could still lead to losses, if investment is made at very high valuations. Investors in Wal-Mart Stores (WMT) in 1999 and Coca-Cola (KO) in 1998 can certainly attest to this fact.
However, a booming business can be rewarding eventually even for the most unlucky investors, provided they are true long-term investors. Great businesses like Wal-Mart and Coca-Cola are attractively priced today, and have managed to record better sales, profits and dividends since hitting all-time-highs at the end of the last millennium. If they can continue pushing forward, their investors will eventually make good profits.
Full Disclosure: Long WMT, KO, NUE, LOW, AFL, BDX, MCD, TGT, WAG
Relevant Articles:
- The Tradeoff between Dividend Yield and Dividend Growth
- Why Dividend Growth Stocks Rock?
- Four Characteristics of The Best Dividend Growth Stocks
- Living off dividends in retirement
- Four Percent Rule for Dividend Investing in Retirement