Dividend Aristocrats (The Complete Guide for 2018) - The Money Snowball (2024)

Dividend Aristocrats are a special group of dividend paying stocks. You’ll find out who was added in 2018, who was dropped, what Aristocrat ETF funds are available, historical performance, building a portfolio and more!

You want to start dividend investing, but it’s hard to know where to begin.

There isroughly 3,000 dividend paying stocks in the United States alone.

That list doesn’t include all the global companies paying dividends.

So where does one start their search? With the Dividend Aristocrats.

You may be thinking “a fancy name like that must make them pretty special” and you’d be right.

Dividend Aristocrats (The Complete Guide for 2018) - The Money Snowball (1)

The Dividend Aristocrats first have to be part of the S&P 500. That means they’re already one of the 500 largest companies in the UStraded on the New York Stock Exchange.

Not only that, but the aristocrats must have increased their dividend payments every year for at least 25 years.

That narrows a list of 3,000+ stocks to a select group of 53 in 2018. The list changes every year as some get added and others fall off.

Through great and terrible markets, these dividend aristocrats have kept increasing their dividends.

Table of Contents

  • List of Aristocrats
  • Importance of Increasing Dividends
  • Historical Performance
  • Risk of Aristocrats
  • Building a Portfolio
  • Global Aristocrats
  • ETF Funds

2018 Dividend Aristocrats

In this 2018 update, C.R. Bard was removed from the list of aristocrats. They were acquired by another aristocrat, Becton-Dickinson Co.

We do have three new additions to the list: Praxair, Roper Technologies, and A.O Smith.

Dividend Aristocrats (The Complete Guide for 2018) - The Money Snowball (2)
AbbVie

Ticker: ABBV

Dividend Aristocrats (The Complete Guide for 2018) - The Money Snowball (3)
Archer-Daniels-Midland Co.

Ticker: ADM

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Aflac

Ticker: AFL

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Air Products & Chemicals

Ticker: APD

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Franklin Resources

Ticker: BEN

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Cardinal Health

Ticker: CAH

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Colgate-Palmolive

Ticker: CL

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Cintas Corp

Ticker: CTAS

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Dover Corp

Ticker: DOV

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Consolidated Edison

Ticker: ED

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Federal Realty Investment Trust

Ticker: FRT

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Genuine Parts

Ticker: GPC

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Hormel Foods

Ticker: HRL

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Johnson & Johnson

Ticker: JNJ

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Lowe's Companies

Ticker: LOW

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Medtronics

Ticker: MDT

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3M

Ticker: MMM

Dividend Aristocrats (The Complete Guide for 2018) - The Money Snowball (20)
Pepsi Co.

Ticker: PEP

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Pentair

Ticker: PNR

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Praxair

Ticker: PX

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Sherwin-Williams

Ticker: SHW

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Stanley Black & Decker

Ticker: SWK

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AT&T

Ticker: T

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T. Rowe Price Group

Ticker: TROW

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Walgreens Boots Alliance

Ticker: WBA

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Exxon Mobile

Ticker: XOM

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Abbott Laboratories

Ticker: ABT

Dividend Aristocrats (The Complete Guide for 2018) - The Money Snowball (30)
Automatic Data Processing

Ticker: ADP

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A.O. Smith Corp

Ticker: AOS

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Becton Dickinson & Co.

Ticker: BDX

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Brown-Foreman Corporation

Ticker: BF.B

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Cincinnati Financial Corp

Ticker: CINF

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Clorox

Ticker: CLX

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Chevron

Ticker: CVX

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Ecolab Inc.

Ticker: ECL

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Emerson Electric

Ticker: EMR

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General Dynamics

Ticker: GD

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W.W. Grainger

Ticker: GWW

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Illinois Tool Works

Ticker: ITW

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Legget & Plat

Ticker: LEG

Dividend Aristocrats (The Complete Guide for 2018) - The Money Snowball (44)
McDonald's

Ticker: MCD

Dividend Aristocrats (The Complete Guide for 2018) - The Money Snowball (45)
McCormick & Company

Ticker: MKC

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Nucor

Ticker: NUE

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Procter & Gamble

Ticker: PG

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PPG Industries

Ticker: PPG

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Roper Technologies

Ticker: ROP

Dividend Aristocrats (The Complete Guide for 2018) - The Money Snowball (50)
S&P Global Inc.

Ticker: SPGI

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Sysco Corporation

Ticker: SYY

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Target

Ticker: TGT

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V.F. Corporation

Ticker: VFC

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Walmart

Ticker: WMT

The Importance of Increasing Dividends

By increasing dividends, these companies are helping you fight inflation.

The long-term goal with dividend stock investing is to build an income snowball. With a large enough snowball, you can live off the passive income dividend payments.

A 3% annual inflation will eat away at the value of those dividends unless the company increases them with each year.

Think of it this way. Say you own a stock that pays you a $2 dividend. Not much but it allows you to buy a $2 candy bar.

Ten years down the road that $2 candy bar now costs you $2.70 because of inflation. That $2 dividend payment doesn’t buy what it used to.

This is why increasing dividend payments is so important. It helps support the relative value.

But there is also a hidden bonus. Stocks that increase their dividend payments also end up performing better.

Historical Performance

Increasing dividends are great, but you also want investments to do well.

The aristocrats have definitely performed well.

Over the years, the dividend aristocrats have outperformed the general market and not by a small amount.

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Source: S&P Fact Sheet

Over a 10 year period, the dividend aristocrats have beat the S&P 500 Index by just under 2% annually.

To put that in perspective: say you invested $10,000 in an S&P 500 index and another $10,000 in a portfolio of aristocrats 10 years ago.

Your money in the S&P 500 would have grown to $24,669. Pretty great.

The portfolio of dividend aristocrats would have grown to $31,758. Pretty awesome!

You made an extra $7,000!

A 2% difference could be thousands of dollars in extra savings. Which also means more passive income.

Great performing stocks are…great. But great performing stocks with low volatility and low risk are stellar!

Yet again, the dividend aristocrats deliver.

Risk of Dividend Aristocrats

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The S&P 500 takes some big hits during recessions (2000-2002, 2008) but the aristocrats hold strong.

They still drop, but it’s not as bad as the rest of the market.

You want to see some resiliency out of a portfolio during the bad times.

Dividend aristocrats do better than the rest of the market for two reasons:

1) They’re paying cash

These companies have already decided to reward their stock holders with dividend payments. They can’t be a company in the start-up phase of business. Cash is their blood supply, so they can’t be a business that is blowing through it to stay afloat. They can’t be taking risky bets.

This means their stock is going to be less risky.

2) They’re going to be selective

Because they can’t be reckless with their cash, these companies are going to play it safe. They’re going to be selective with their business investments.

Being smart with cash allocation is a hallmark of aristocrat companies. They know part of that money is going to investors in the form of dividends so they have to make good decisions with what’s left.

That decision-making process means added value to the investor.

Now you know how awesome dividend aristocrats are, so let’s talk about how to get started investing in them.

Building a Dividend Aristocrat Portfolio

You know the beauty of dividend aristocrats. You’ve got the list of 2018 companies.

If their performance is so great shouldn’t you be able to start buying buying?

Diversification is the key. You’ve got to make sure you’re building a portfolio in such a way you don’t get burned.

Imagine you’ve bought 10 stocks for a total investment of $100.

Without paying attention to diversification, you could have $90 in one stock and $10 in the rest.

If that one stock with 90% of your money runs into problems and drops 20%, your portfolio is going to drop nearly 20% as well.

(1-0.2) * $90 = $72

That’s an $18 loss you took.

Instead, if you’d spread out that $100 evenly to 10 stocks, a 20% drop in one wouldn’t be as bad.

(1-0.2) * $10 = $8

Now it becomes a $2 loss.

There are two criteria you want to watch out for: sector balance and value balance.

Sector Balance

Companies fall into a series of broad sectors. Whatever industry they serve places them in a business sector.

They are:

  • Consumer Cyclical
  • Industrial
  • Healthcare
  • Consumer Defensive
  • Technology
  • Financial
  • Basic Material
  • Utility
  • Energy
  • Communications
  • REITs

Often times the stocks in each sector will move together. This isn’t an exact science, but more a rule of thumb.

It’s best not to get too invested in one specific sector for the same reason as the example above.

I’d say the max that you should be invested in any one sector is 20% of your portfolio.

Value Balance

The value of a stock is the stock price multiplied by how many shares you own. It’s constantly fluctuating and can change in large swings from day-to-day based on the stock price.

That’s why we want to buy stocks when they have the best value potential. The dividend is one part of our return with value being the second.

Value growth makes the snowball bigger.

While the main goal is creating income, the bigger your snowball gets, the faster it grows, the more snow it can produce. The larger your portfolio value, the faster the portfolio grows, the more income it’ll produce.

You want to make sure the value of one stock doesn’t get too large compared to the value of others in the portfolio.

Rule of thumb here is to not have more than 5% of your portfolio invested in any one stock.

How Many Stocks to Own in Your Portfolio

So how many companies should you own stock in? That’s up to you.

You could own a bit of every dividend aristocrat and be fine.

But, that becomes a bit hard to manage for some people.

The ideal number lies somewhere around 30.

A study of 32 randomly selected stocks reduced the risk of a portfolio by 95% compared to a portfolio of every stock on the New York Stock Exchange.

That’s a pretty stellar reduction in risk and a much more manageable portfolio.

Global Dividend Aristocrats

The United States isn’t the only one with great companies that pay ever-increasing dividends.

Canada and other countries provide safe investments to grow your income snowball.

They’re worth considering to get even more diversification within your portfolio.

The Canadian Dividend All-Stars are a list of companies with five or more consecutive years of dividend increases. Download here.

The UK Dividend Champions are a list of companies with 25+ years of consecutive dividend increases. They aren’t considered aristocrats because they aren’t part of the S&P 500. Download here.

ETF Funds

If creating a portfolio of stocks doesn’t sound like fun, there are dividend aristocrat funds available.

You’ve got to be willing to pay a bit in fees, though. Even though the fees are small, they will hurt your return in the long run. Investing your money in a fund better than not investing at all, though. Put your money to work!

Funds make life easier because it means you only have to keep track of one thing, that fund. You can set up an automatic deposit and forget about.

Let someone else do the managing.

Some of these don’t follow the exact rules of a dividend aristocrat, but vary for one reason or another.

  • ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats (NOBL)
  • SPDR S&P Global Dividend ETF (WDIV)
  • ProShares S&P MidCap 400 Dividend Aristocrats (REGL)
  • SPDR S&P Dividend ETF (SDY)

ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats (NOBL)

Dividend Aristocrats (The Complete Guide for 2018) - The Money Snowball (57)

Source: NOBL Fact Sheet

ProShares is the only one that follows the strict guidelines for being an aristocrat.

It only holds companies that are part of the S&P 500 and have increased dividends for the last 25 years.

If it can’t find 40 stocks that meet the criteria, it will branch out to companies with a shorter dividend growth history

SPDR S&P Global Dividend ETF (WDIV)

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Source: WDIV Fact Sheet

Like I said, great dividend paying companies aren’t in the US. There are many global companies that can offer great passive income.

The S&P Global Dividend ETF isn’t a true dividend aristocrat fund, though.

While it looks for companies with rising dividends, it only requires 10 years of growing or stable dividend payments.

Which means the company could have maintained their payout without growing it and are still considered.

It also reduces the required length of time from 25 years to 10.

The fund selects the 100 highest paying dividend stocks that meet that criteria. No more than 20 can come from the same country.

ProShares S&P MidCap 400 Dividend Aristocrats (REGL)

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Source: REGL Fact Sheet

This fund is a slight variation on the traditional dividend aristocrat.

If you’re looking for some stocks with a little more growth opportunity and are hoping to see more value growth, this fund is for you.

Instead of looking to the S&P 500, this fund pulls from the S&P Midcap 400.

That’s group of smaller companies that are still in their growth phase. To build a fund, the guidelines get fudged.

Instead of looking to 25 years of dividend growth, this ETF only requires 15 years.

It’s also not pulling from the S&P 500.

SPDR S&P Dividend ETF (SDY)

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Source: SDY Fact Sheet

If you want the highest yielding dividend fund with a loose restriction on the dividend aristocrat guidelines, this is the choice.

The SPDR S&P Dividend ETF follows the S&P 1500 Composite Index for its pool of candidates. So instead of 500 companies, it has 1500 to select from. It then targets stocks with a dividend increase history of 20 years.

The fund tracks a yield-weighted list of 50 companies. Meaning they invest more money in stocks with higher yields and less in stocks with low yields.

Conclusion

There isn’t anything particularly amazing about the dividend aristocrats. A lot of them are pretty old and mundane.

Old and mundane is pretty great when it comes to investing.

Companies that you know are going to be around for the next 20 years are the types of companies you’re looking for.

While start-ups may grow faster and tech companies have cooler products, they can be risky.

You’re not looking for risk. You’re busy looking for income.

Dividend Aristocrats (The Complete Guide for 2018) - The Money Snowball (2024)

FAQs

How do I buy S&P 500 dividend aristocrats? ›

If you're looking to invest in Dividend Aristocrats through a fund, fund manager Pro Shares has an ETF especially for that, the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats ETF (NOBL). Another option is the SPDR S&P Dividend ETF (SDY). Both funds pay dividends quarterly.

What is the highest paying dividend aristocrat? ›

Highest Yielding Dividend Aristocrats To Buy Today
  • Amcor (AMCR)
  • 3M Company (MMM)
  • Realty Income Corp (O)
Mar 26, 2024

What is the average return of the dividend aristocrats? ›

Average returns
PeriodAverage annualised returnTotal return
Last year7.4%7.4%
Last 5 years3.4%18.5%
Last 10 years5.9%77.5%

What is the dividend snowball method? ›

The dividend snowball is simply a process for reinvesting the dividends you earn from assets such as stocks, ETFs, and REITs. Essentially, you take the distributions you've made from these securities and use them to buy up more shares. As you might guess, purchasing more shares means earning more distributions.

Is there an ETF that tracks Dividend Aristocrats? ›

The SPDR Dividend Aristocrats ETFs source quality yield by focusing on companies with a long, consistent history of paying dividends.

Is Dividend Aristocrats a good investment? ›

As an investor, you may be looking for stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that can provide you with a little extra value over the long term. If you're planning to hold shares of a company for the long haul, you might want to consider looking at the S&P 500 dividend aristocrats and dividend kings.

What are the three dividend stocks to buy and hold forever? ›

Here's a rundown of three growth picks you can feel good about buying now and sitting on indefinitely.
  • Ulta Beauty. To be fair, Jefferies analyst Ashley Helgans made a valid observation when downgrading Ulta Beauty (NASDAQ: ULTA) to a hold recently. ...
  • Amazon. ...
  • Nike.
2 days ago

What is the best way to invest in Dividend Aristocrats? ›

How to invest in dividend aristocrats. If you're new to investing and want to buy the dividend aristocrats, the first step is to open a brokerage account if you don't already have one. Then you'll need to choose between investing in individual dividend aristocrat stocks, or investing in a dividend aristocrats fund.

What is the king of dividends? ›

A Dividend King is a publicly traded company that has both paid and increased a regular dividend every year for at least 50 consecutive years.

What is the dog of the Dividend Aristocrats? ›

The 'Dogs Of Dividend Aristocrats' approach

The Dogs of the Dividend Aristocrats is based on the same investing strategy as the famous “Dogs of The Dow”, only with the difference that the index used is not the Dow 30, but the Dividend Aristocrats index. This index is defined by S&P indices company.

What are the 5 highest dividend paying stocks? ›

20 high-dividend stocks
CompanyDividend Yield
Evolution Petroleum Corporation (EPM)8.39%
Eagle Bancorp Inc (MD) (EGBN)8.18%
CVR Energy Inc (CVI)8.13%
First Of Long Island Corp. (FLIC)7.87%
17 more rows
6 days ago

What are the four requirements for a stock to be a Dividend Aristocrat? ›

4 criterial to make the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats list:
  • Universe: The company must be a member of the S&P 500 index.
  • Dividends: Must have increased dividends every year for at least 25 years.
  • Market cap: Minimum float-adjusted market cap of $3 billion.
Feb 2, 2023

What is the 4% dividend rule? ›

The 4% rule for retirement budgeting suggests that a retiree withdraw 4% of the balance in their retirement accounts in the first year after retiring and then withdraw the same dollar amount, adjusted for inflation, every year thereafter.

How long does it take for a dividend snowball? ›

The compounding magic takes time, and the true potential of reinvested dividends reveals itself most dramatically over the long term. The snowball effect isn't about doubling your investment in a year; instead, it's about consistent, robust growth over many years, even decades.

What is the snowball payoff strategy? ›

Once a balance is paid off, you take the funds you had previously allocated to your smallest debt and put them toward the next-smallest balance, essentially building, or “snowballing,” your repayment toward the next balance. This cycle repeats until all of your debt is repaid. Each balance payoff is a win.

What stocks make up the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats? ›

Sector*
  • Target Corp. Symbol. TGT. Sector* Consumer Staples.
  • Caterpillar Inc. Symbol. CAT. Sector* Industrials.
  • Lowe's Cos Inc. Symbol. LOW. Sector* ...
  • Pentair PLC. Symbol. PNR. Sector* ...
  • Emerson Electric Co. Symbol. EMR. Sector* ...
  • Dover Corp. Symbol. DOV. Sector* ...
  • Archer-Daniels-Midland Co. Symbol. ADM. Sector* ...
  • Ecolab Inc. Symbol. ECL. Sector*

What is the difference between Dividend Aristocrats and sp500? ›

The Aristocrats index year-to-date return trails the overall S&P 500's 20.9%. However, for all of 2022, the Aristocrats returned -6.2%, outperforming the S&P 500 by 11.9 percentage points. Since the Aristocrats index's 1990 inception, it has an annualized 11.6% return vs. 10.2% for the S&P 500.

Does Vanguard have a Dividend Aristocrats Fund? ›

Vanguard Dividend Appreciation Index Fund ETF Shares is the best aristocrat and future aristocrat ETF I've ever found, with a perfect dividend growth record of 16 years without an annual dividend cut.

How do I buy shares in aristocrat? ›

How can I buy or sell my Aristocrat shares? If you wish to trade securities and shares on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX), you will need to contact a licensed stockbroker or online broker to arrange the transaction.

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