3 Monster Dividend Stocks to Hold for the Next 10 Years

Source The Motley Fool

Key Points

  • Clorox's Purell acquisition strengthens long-term growth while supporting a nearly 5% dividend yield.

  • Brown-Forman's iconic spirits portfolio and 42-year dividend streak reward patient investors.

  • Kimberly-Clark's transformation and trusted brands position it for steady decade-long compounding.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Kimberly-Clark ›

Ten years is a long time. In a decade, interest rates will have cycled multiple times, a recession will have come and gone, and the stocks that dominate the headlines today will likely have been replaced by something no one is talking about yet. That's exactly why dividend investing across a 10-year window is different from everything else in a portfolio.

You're not really trying to predict the next quarter or the next runner. You're buying businesses that will pay you while you wait, and ideally pay you more each year than they did the year before. The three companies below are solid dividend stocks to hold for the next 10 years.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now, when you join Stock Advisor. See the stocks »

1. The Clorox Company

The Clorox Company (NYSE: CLX) has been through a stretch that would have broken a lesser brand. A $580 million ERP system upgrade in 2023 caused a cyberattack disruption that knocked organic sales down 17% in a single quarter. The stock fell to decade-low valuations. Most investors moved on.

An individual washes their hands in a sink.

Image source: Getty Images.

What happened next is the actual story. Clorox spent the following years rebuilding, and in January 2026, it made its most significant strategic move in decades: a $2.25 billion acquisition of GOJO Industries, the maker of Purell. The deal closed April 1, 2026. Purell is not a specialty brand. It is the category. After the pandemic permanently changed how the world thinks about hand hygiene, owning Purell for the next 10 years means owning a product that now lives in every school, hospital, office building, and restaurant in the country, as a reflex rather than a purchase decision. Clorox's long-term sales target of 3% to 5% organic growth now has a new engine behind it.

The near-term noise is real: Fiscal 2026 earnings-per-share guidance was cut as GOJO integration costs and debt weighed on the balance sheet. The stock yields nearly 5% at current prices. Morningstar values it at $134 per share against a price near $95. For a 10-year holder, those integration costs become a footnote. The Purell brand does not.

2. Brown-Forman Corporation

Brown-Forman Corporation (NYSE: BFB) has raised its dividend for 42 consecutive years. That streak covers the dot-com crash, the 2008 financial crisis, COVID-19, and the current macro uncertainty, and it kept going through all of it. The company makes Jack Daniel's, Woodford Reserve, Herradura Tequila, and el Jimador, among others. Its core product is aged whiskey, which takes years to produce, creates a natural supply constraint, and carries margin profiles that most consumer goods companies would trade anything to have.

The stock is under pressure right now because the global spirits market has softened. Premium bourbon and tequila consumers pulled back in 2025 and early 2026 as price fatigue set in after years of category inflation. This is all a cyclical problem, not a structural one. Meanwhile, Brown-Forman launched Jack Daniel's Tennessee Blackberry in 2026 and saw "outstanding consumer engagement" on the new flavor extension -- proof that the brand still has room to grow inside an audience it already owns.

The dividend yield near current prices sits around 3.6%. A decade from now, if Brown-Forman maintains its historical dividend growth rate of roughly 6% to 8% per year, the yield on today's cost basis will be substantially higher, which is the entire logic of buying a dividend grower when sentiment is low. Ten years of compounding on a premium spirits portfolio is a quiet but powerful bet.

3. Kimberly-Clark

Kimberly-Clark (NASDAQ: KMB) is in the middle of what its own company filings call the most consequential transformation in its 154-year history. The company that makes Huggies, Kleenex, Scott, Cottonelle, and Pull-Ups is rebuilding itself from the inside -- selling lower-margin businesses, restructuring its cost base, and reinvesting in brand equity and product innovation.

In Q1 2026, adjusted operating profit grew 3.7%, and the company reaffirmed its full-year guidance -- a signal that the restructuring isn't disrupting the underlying business. In May, Pull-Ups launched a new Learning Layer system that adds educational interactivity to the training pant category. That might sound like a small product update, but Kimberly-Clark has been a Dividend King -- notching 50-plus consecutive years of dividend increases -- by making exactly these kinds of moves: incremental improvements to products parents buy on autopilot, over and over, for decades.

The pending combination with Kenvue (NYSE: KVUE) will create one of the world's largest personal care and consumer health platforms. For a 10-year investor, that combination means owning Kleenex, Huggies, Neutrogena, Tylenol, and Listerine under one operational umbrella. The dividend yield is safe, the brands are permanent, and the stock doesn't show up on any "hot picks" list, which is common for 10-year compounders.

Should you buy stock in Kimberly-Clark right now?

Before you buy stock in Kimberly-Clark, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Kimberly-Clark wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $417,305!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $1,293,148!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 936% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 209% for the S&P 500. Don't miss the latest top 10 list, available with Stock Advisor, and join an investing community built by individual investors for individual investors.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of June 21, 2026.

Micah Zimmerman has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Kenvue. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Bitcoin CME gaps at $35,000, $27,000 and $21,000, which one gets filled first?Prioritize filling the $27,000 gap and even try higher.
Author  FXStreet
Aug 22, 2023
Prioritize filling the $27,000 gap and even try higher.
placeholder
Pinduoduo Earnings Incoming: Morgan Stanley Sees Long-Term Profit Potential​Insights – On November 21, Chinese e-commerce giant Pinduoduo (PDD) will release its Q3 2024 earnings.
Author  Mitrade
Nov 20, 2024
​Insights – On November 21, Chinese e-commerce giant Pinduoduo (PDD) will release its Q3 2024 earnings.
placeholder
Elon Musk’s xAI and Neuralink Launch New Funding Rounds​Billionaire Elon Musk recently raised funds for his two high-profile tech companies, xAI and Neuralink.
Author  Insights
Jun 03, 2025
​Billionaire Elon Musk recently raised funds for his two high-profile tech companies, xAI and Neuralink.
placeholder
Bitcoin briefly loses 2025 gains as crypto plunges over the weekend.Bitcoin experienced a sharp decline this weekend, briefly erasing its 2025 gains and dipping below its year-opening value of $93,507. The cryptocurrency fell to a low of $93,029 on Sunday, representing a 25% drop from its all-time high in October. Although it has rebounded slightly to around $94,209, the pressures on the market remain significant. The downturn occurred despite the reopening of the U.S. government on Thursday, which many had hoped would provide essential support for crypto markets. This year initially appeared promising for cryptocurrencies, particularly after the inauguration of President Donald Trump, who has established the most pro-crypto administration thus far. However, ongoing political tensions—including Trump's tariff strategies and the recent government shutdown, lasting a historic 43 days—have contributed to several rapid price pullbacks for Bitcoin throughout the year. Market dynamics are also being influenced by Bitcoin whales—investors holding large amounts of Bitcoin—who have been offloading portions of their assets, consequently stalling price rallies even as positive regulatory developments emerge. Despite these sell-offs, analysts from Glassnode argue that this behavior aligns with typical patterns seen among long-term investors during the concluding stages of bull markets, suggesting it is not indicative of a mass exodus. Notably, Bitcoin is not alone in its struggles, as Ethereum and Solana have also recorded declines of 7.95% and 28.3%, respectively, since the start of the year, while numerous altcoins have faced even steeper losses. Looking ahead, questions linger regarding the viability of the four-year cycle thesis, particularly given the increasing institutional support and regulatory frameworks now in place in the crypto landscape. Matt Hougan, chief investment officer at Bitwise, remains optimistic, suggesting a potential Bitcoin resurgence in 2026 driven by the “debasement trade” thesis and a broader trend toward increased adoption of stablecoins, tokenization, and decentralized finance. Hougan emphasized the soundness of the underlying fundamentals, pointing to a positive outlook for the sector in the longer term.
Author  Mitrade
Nov 17, 2025
Bitcoin experienced a sharp decline this weekend, briefly erasing its 2025 gains and dipping below its year-opening value of $93,507. The cryptocurrency fell to a low of $93,029 on Sunday, representing a 25% drop from its all-time high in October. Although it has rebounded slightly to around $94,209, the pressures on the market remain significant. The downturn occurred despite the reopening of the U.S. government on Thursday, which many had hoped would provide essential support for crypto markets. This year initially appeared promising for cryptocurrencies, particularly after the inauguration of President Donald Trump, who has established the most pro-crypto administration thus far. However, ongoing political tensions—including Trump's tariff strategies and the recent government shutdown, lasting a historic 43 days—have contributed to several rapid price pullbacks for Bitcoin throughout the year. Market dynamics are also being influenced by Bitcoin whales—investors holding large amounts of Bitcoin—who have been offloading portions of their assets, consequently stalling price rallies even as positive regulatory developments emerge. Despite these sell-offs, analysts from Glassnode argue that this behavior aligns with typical patterns seen among long-term investors during the concluding stages of bull markets, suggesting it is not indicative of a mass exodus. Notably, Bitcoin is not alone in its struggles, as Ethereum and Solana have also recorded declines of 7.95% and 28.3%, respectively, since the start of the year, while numerous altcoins have faced even steeper losses. Looking ahead, questions linger regarding the viability of the four-year cycle thesis, particularly given the increasing institutional support and regulatory frameworks now in place in the crypto landscape. Matt Hougan, chief investment officer at Bitwise, remains optimistic, suggesting a potential Bitcoin resurgence in 2026 driven by the “debasement trade” thesis and a broader trend toward increased adoption of stablecoins, tokenization, and decentralized finance. Hougan emphasized the soundness of the underlying fundamentals, pointing to a positive outlook for the sector in the longer term.
placeholder
Gold Price Forecast: XAU/USD surges to all-time high above $4,650 amid Greenland tariff threatsGold price (XAU/USD) rises to a fresh record high near $4,675 during the early Asian session on Monday. The precious metal gains momentum after US President Donald Trump said he would slap tariffs on eight European nations that have opposed his plan to take Greenland.
Author  FXStreet
Jan 19, Mon
Gold price (XAU/USD) rises to a fresh record high near $4,675 during the early Asian session on Monday. The precious metal gains momentum after US President Donald Trump said he would slap tariffs on eight European nations that have opposed his plan to take Greenland.
goTop
quote