Goods that people purchase over and over again ultimately support reliable dividends.
Artificial intelligence isn’t always the threat it seems like it could be to some companies. In fact, sometimes it’s an opportunity.
Eventually, dividend growth becomes far more meaningful than a stock’s dividend yield at the time you buy it.
Why do you invest? Most people know that the answer should be something like "to make the most risk-adjusted constructive use of my money." If we're being honest, though, many of us find picking stocks and monitoring our portfolios at least a little bit entertaining. That's OK.
As a reminder to income-seeking investors, however, the very best dividend stocks are usually relatively boring names that just keep on cranking out cash payments regardless of the economic backdrop.
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Here's a look at four boring dividend stocks that make for fantastic long-term income holdings.
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It doesn't get much more mundane than dishwashing detergent, diapers, toothpaste, and laundry supplies. There's a clear upside to being in these businesses, though. These are products that people buy over and over again. The key to sustained success in these markets is often just achieving enough scale and market dominance to keep your per-unit production cost low and your pricing power high.
Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG) has done exactly that. Its Tide laundry detergent makes up roughly 40% of the U.S. market, while Pampers diapers' control of the domestic market is about half. In fact, most of the products in its portfolio regularly lead their respective categories.
Perhaps the unsung hero in P&G's enduring success, however, is its sheer size and what that means in terms of marketing its goods. Not only does the company have a great deal of leverage it can use to ensure its retail partners prominently feature its products, it's simply got a bigger checkbook to fund its promotional efforts. The company spent a whopping $9.2 billion on advertising alone last year. Its competitors just can't match that.
Perhaps more important to income-minded investors, P&G has now raised its annualized dividend payment for 69 consecutive years. You'd be plugging into this stock's track record while the forward-looking yield stands at 2.6%.
There's nothing exciting about the investment management business, either. Fund managers pick stocks, and charge a modest quarterly percentage based on the amount of money they're tending. Surprisingly enough, performance doesn't mean much here. Maybe that's because most of these managers ultimately underperform the overall market, while the ones that do beat it typically don't do so for very long.
Still, it's an ideal business model for supporting reliable, recurring dividend payments.
While Brookfield Asset Management (NYSE: BAM) isn't really structured any differently than any other name in the investment management business, it's a compelling standout in one way. It's only focused on industries with above-average long-term growth potential. Brookfield is the name behind Brookfield Infrastructure Partners, Brookfield Renewable Energy Partners, and Brookfield Business Partners. That puts it in businesses like water management, AI data centers, solar energy production, logistics, hydroelectric power, and several other increasingly important industries.
It's also just good at what it does -- picking the right businesses in the first place and then managing them well. Based on its historical track record (this year's quarterly per-share payout is up 15% from 2025's payment, for perspective), this company's long-term revenue and dividend growth target of between 15% and 20% seems very achievable.
Automatic Data Processing (NASDAQ: ADP) is the payroll processor you may know better as ADP (yawn!). One out of every six U.S. workers receive their paychecks from this service provider.
That seems like it could be a potential problem. Given all that artificial intelligence can do these days, maybe it's only a matter of time before AI negates the need for this company's service.
Don't count Automatic Data Processing out just yet, however, for a handful of reasons.
Chief among these reasons is the fact that ADP is so much more than just a payroll processor. Employee time and attendance solutions, benefits management, recruitment, compliance (when and where it's needed), and more are all in its wheelhouse. These are all nuanced and organization-specific HR functions that can't be easily outsourced to an automated platform. Payroll taxes are also a matter that most institutions aren't quite ready to let AI wholly handle either, since fixing any errors could be a considerable headache.
For what it's worth, Automatic Data Processing is embracing artificial intelligence in areas and ways where it makes sense to do so, allowing the company to offer more efficient and effective tools to its 1.1 million customers. Its 51-year streak of annual dividend increases isn't in jeopardy -- at least, not yet.
This stock's yielding 3.2%, by the way.
How would you like to step into a boring stock that's upped its per-share payout for an incredible 64 years? Beverage giant Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) has done it, with no end to the track record in sight.
The secret to its long-term dependability isn't really a secret. Not only is its namesake cola one of the world's best-known and most beloved beverages, The Coca-Cola Company is also parent to a slew of other popular brands, including Gold Peak tea, Minute Maid juices, Glaceau water, Costa Coffee, and Powerade sports drink. It's got something to sell consumers despite their ever-changing preferences.
Even more compelling to income-minded investors is the underlying business model.
Contrary to a common assumption, Coca-Cola does very little bottling of its own products anymore. Unlike rival PepsiCo, it punts most of this work to third-party bottlers, who also handle distribution duties. While it seemingly shouldn't matter who does this work, this model takes a great deal of the cost-based risk off Coca-Cola's books, allowing it to focus on what it does best. That's marketing its brands so well that they become lifestyle choices.
Newcomers will be stepping into a forward-looking yield of 2.6%, which isn't huge. However, it's based on a dividend that's grown nearly 90% over the course of just the past 10 years. It will grow into a powerhouse income-producing holding soon enough.
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James Brumley has positions in Coca-Cola and Procter & Gamble. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Brookfield Asset Management. The Motley Fool recommends Brookfield Infrastructure Partners, Brookfield Renewable, and Brookfield Renewable Partners. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.