by Tom Hutchinson, Chief Analyst, Cabot Dividend Investor and Cabot Income Advisor
Dividend stocks are the place to be. Whether you want to build your wealth or get an income or anything in between, you need to know the dividend story.
Dividend stocks have been one of the most successful wealth-building investments in history. Few people know this. In fact, a lot of people I know regard them as boring. They want to find the next Amazon or Microsoft. Some of them will. Some people will win the lottery, too. It happens, just not to you.
If you’re serious about making money in the market and want investments that actually have a high-percentage chance of working, dividend stocks are your answer. In fact, you’ll be amazed at how realistic it is to grow your wealth and fund your retirement without losing your shirt in the attempt. Below I highlight five of the absolute best dividend investments on the market.
But first, let’s go over some facts about dividend stocks.
The Track Record
From 1973 through 2024, dividend-paying stocks provided an average annual return of better than 9% compared to just over 4% for non-dividend payers, more than double the return. Believe me, that makes an enormous difference over time.
And it’s not just outperformance. Dividend stocks have achieved such superior returns with less risk and volatility. That’s a big deal, because downside and volatility are the things that scare us out of the market and prevent us from participating in the market’s historical upward trend.
Dividends have always been a huge part of stock market investing. In fact, between 1940 and 2024, dividends represented 34% of overall market returns. Prices go up and down and sideways, while dividends keep rolling in no matter what.
S&P 500 Total Return: Price and Dividend Contribution
But that’s just the money. Another big part of the reason these stocks have been so successful is because the companies that pay them and grow them are just plain better. Dividends are actually a great indicator of the very best companies to own.
Strong dividend payers are predominantly large and mature businesses with proven market niches and competitive advantages. Such characteristics enable them to generate consistent and predictable revenue streams from which they are able to make regular payouts. As the chart below displays, dividend payers as a whole tend to be far more profitable businesses than non-dividend payers.
Not All Dividends are the Same
Sure, dividend-paying stocks have outperformed the overall market and blown away the return
of non-dividend payers. But not all dividend stocks are good investments. This cherished group has its share of dogs too.
Choosing a stock starts with a thorough analysis of the individual company, its industry and the outside environment. But, aside from the typical number crunching when considering any stock (i.e., earnings prospects, balance sheet, management, etc.) there are some general considerations to make when specifically analyzing a company’s dividend.
Payout ratio
The payout ratio represents the percentage of earnings that are paid out in dividends, calculated as earnings per share divided by dividends per share. This number represents how extended the company is paying the current dividend and can reflect if the current dividend is on thin ice or if there is room
for growth.
However, payout ratios are relative. Certain industries, such as utilities and telecommunications, tend to pay out a higher percentage of earnings in dividends while other industries typically pay out a lower percentage. A payout ratio should be measured against the industry average, its historic average and whether it has been rising or falling.
It seems simple—but it’s also crucial. A company needs to consistently earn plenty of money from which to pay the dividend. Some companies try to fake you out. But income and cash flow statements tell the tale. This needs to be checked because the market is cruel to companies that cut the dividend.
Earnings growth
Earnings fuel the dividend and the stock price. It’s essential that a company exhibits a consistent track record of growing earnings. But even more importantly, there needs to be a strong reason to believe the company can continue to grow earnings in the future.
A company needs to have a strong niche in a business that can grow. Ideally, a business should be well positioned ahead of a powerful and undeniable trend, such as catering to an aging population or selling to the growing emerging-market middle class.
Dividend growth
Just like dividend-paying stocks are a subset of the overall market that have outperformed, stocks with growing dividends are a subset of dividend stocks that have consistently outperformed that group.
Between 1973 and 2024, Dividend Growers and Initiators in the S&P 500 returned more than Dividend Payers by more than 1% per year, on average.
Companies that have grown their dividend consistently reflect not only consistent earnings growth but management’s commitment to the dividend. Also, growing dividends is a great defense against inflation. Unlike bonds, dividend stocks can increase payments during times of rising prices.
The Wealth-Building Power of Dividends
There is an income crisis in America. It used to be that a person who retired at 65 didn’t expect to live much longer. Not anymore. Now, people are living another 20 or 30 years after they retire. That’s fantastic. But it also creates a problem. How do you not run out of money?
You need an income generated by your money that you can live on without blowing through the principal. Few people have pensions anymore and Social Security is designed to be just a supplement. After taxes and inflation, there’s nothing left.
Dividend stocks are the only answer out there. Yes, CDs and Treasuries have high yields at the moment thanks to the Fed having its foot on the gas on interest rates, but we’re still talking 4.5-5% yields,
max. With dividend stocks, you can get a respectable income and hopefully grow your principal in a much shorter span. The demand for these investments should be high, and that will help boost prices over time.
But let’s say you don’t need the income now. Dividends are fantastic wealth builders. Reinvesting dividends has a compounding effect on an investment, delivering jaw-dropping returns over time. Reinvested dividends buy more shares of stock. More shares of stock pay still more dividends. And if the dividends grow and the stock price appreciates, the returns can be astounding.
Suppose you buy 1,000 shares of a $20 stock, a $20,000 investment. Also assume that the stock pays a 5% yield ($1 per year) when you buy it and over the next 10 years the dividend grows by an average of 5% per year. Let’s also assume that the stock price appreciates an average of 5% per year over the next 10 years.
If you just reinvest the dividends without adding another dime of your own money to the investment, that $20,000 investment will grow to over $53,000 in 10 years. And that’s with modest and realistic criteria. It would be like buying a home 10 years ago for $200,000 that’s now worth $530,000. Wouldn’t you think you made a brilliant investment?
Okay, enough of the theoretical stuff; let’s take a look at some real-life examples. Here’s how a $10,000 investment made 10 years ago (03/17/2016 to 03/17/2026) would have grown with dividends reinvested in some well-known blue-chip stocks.
Home Depot (HD): $33,440
Walmart (WMT): $66,361
McDonald’s (MCD): $33.737
Visa (V): $46,020
Caterpillar (CAT): $119,233
Mind you, these aren’t up-and-comers in nanotechnology or artificial intelligence. They are household
names you can own without worrying.
That’s great. But you probably don’t have a functioning time machine that would enable you to go back 10 years and make these investments. Anybody can go back and look at what has already happened. The trick is to find great investments for the next 10 years.
Okay, fair enough. I’ll take the Pepsi challenge. Here are five dividend stocks that have a good chance to
earn great returns over the next 10 years.
Cabot’s Five Best Dividend Stocks
AbbVie (ABBV)
Annual yield: 3.1%
Markets go up and down—always have, always will. There will be recessions and recoveries and bull markets and bear markets. But certain trends will continue through it all. One such trend is the unmistakable and inevitable aging of the population.
Because of longer life spans and diminishing fertility rates, the population in the U.S. and around the globe is older now than ever before. In the U.S., nearly a third of the population is 50 or older. An average of 10,000 baby boomers will turn 65 every single day, and the fastest-growing segment of the population is 65 and older.
That makes healthcare a growth industry as well as a defensive one, meaning it thrives in any economy. Profits roll in no matter what. And what do you know—healthcare has been one of the best-performing market sectors in the latest bull market and is one of the more resilient sectors.
AbbVie (ABBV) combines the stability and high dividend payout of a big pharmaceutical company with the high growth rate of a biotechnology company. The stock has posted an average annual return of 19.7% since it was spun off from Abbott Laboratories (ABT) in early 2013.
AbbVie is a cutting-edge, research-based pharmaceutical company specializing in small-molecule drugs. It uses biology on living things to effect the next generation of medicine in addressing the world’s health needs.
AbbVie faced a recent hurdle with the patent expiration of long-time cash cow Humira, the world’s top-selling autoimmune drug. But the firm’s robust pipeline of newer drugs – particularly Rinvoq and Skyrizi – has already surpassed Humira’s peak sales.
Broadcom Inc. (AVGO)
Annual Yield: 0.8%
Few stocks have benefited from the artificial intelligence craze like Broadcom (AVGO) has. In the spring of 2023, Nvidia (NVDA) reported blowout earnings thanks to demand for its AI chips, which blew away expectations. That’s when the AI craze got real in terms of bottom lines and stock prices. Other AI stocks also took off, including AVGO, which has more than quintupled since.
Broadcom is a global technology infrastructure leader and an industry Goliath, with $68 billion in annual net revenues. It’s an icon of the technology revolution with roots that trace back over 50 years, to the old AT&T/Bell Labs. The company has many category-leading products in semiconductors and infrastructure software solutions.
Broadcom provides components that enable networks to operate together and communicate with each other, from the service provider all the way to the end user and device. The company is an early comer to the technology party, providing crucial infrastructure that enables other technologies that come along the way. The company is so entrenched in the infrastructure of today’s technology that 90% of internet traffic uses Broadcom’s systems.
Broadcom benefits from AI in a brilliant way. It makes generative AI chips. These chips don’t provide AI functions per se, but rather the technology that enables AI to connect to all other systems — which it must, to be of any use. The sheer volume increases from the new technology, as well as soaring demand for the next generations of its chips, should enable Broadcom to achieve a much higher level of profit growth for years to come.
The company got a huge bump in 2024 when it announced a 10-for-1 stock split. The stock also got a nice 10% bump after reporting earnings in March that showed revenues for its AI chips more than doubled in the latest quarter.
Broadcom soundly beat expectations. But it was the positive AI comments by management that really juiced the stock. Broadcom projects AI revenue to well exceed $100 billion by 2027.Let’s put that in perspective. Revenue for the whole company over the trailing twelve months was $68.3 billion. Just the AI part is expected to be well over $100 billion next year. And that’s from $8.4 billion in the most recent quarter. Broadcom tends to be on target, if not modest, with its estimates. Unlike some other early AI beneficiaries, the opportunity for Broadcom isn’t peaking. It’s broadening.
Eli Lilly (LLY)
Annual Yield: 0.6%
Indiana-based Eli Lilly is a global pharmaceutical company with over $65 billion in annual revenue, 41,000 employees, and sales in 110 countries. Founded in 1876, Lilly is noteworthy for its unusually high focus on research and development (R&D), where it historically allocates well over 20% of sales compared to an average of a high-teens percentage for the industry.
The R&D focus pays off, as Lilly has arguably the very best pipeline and lineup of recently launched drugs in the industry. Lilly currently has five drugs under FDA review, 38 in phase III, and 51 drugs in earlier phases. Recently launched breast cancer drug Verzenio is another blockbuster with $5.7 billion in revenue in 2025. The primary focus is neuroscience, cardiometabolic, cancer, and immunology.
The catalyst for the stock, however, is the recent mega-blockbuster weight-loss drugs. Weight-loss drugs are the hottest thing in the industry now because of the massive potential market in which 30% of the population is obese and there is a huge runway for growth. Its new weight-loss drug Zepbound and diabetes drug Mounjaro, which are its current weight-loss regimen, are killing it. Plus, Alzheimer’s disease drug donanemab also has mega-blockbuster potential.
In 2025, Zepbound and Mounjaro generated a staggering $36 billion. The revenues continue to grow rapidly as they generated $11.7 billion in the fourth quarter alone. The company reported revenue growth of 45% and EPS growth of 96% for 2025. Lilly is guiding for full-year 2026 revenue growth of 25% and earnings per share growth of 49% at the midpoints.
It has a weight-loss drug pill currently under FDA review, due for a decision on approval in April. The current drugs on the market require an injection. A pill could be a game changer in the white-hot weight-loss drug arena. Drugs taken orally are more desirable and cheaper to manufacture. The weight-loss drug market is expected to reach $130 billion by 2030. The oral drug could give Lilly an even bigger boost in this massive market.
You may look at the great performance and think you missed the boat. People said the same thing five years ago. LLY seems expensive with a forward price/earnings ratio of 29. But the PEG ratio, which factors in the expected growth rate, is only 1.0, signifying good value.
Iron Mountain Incorporated (IRM)
Annual yield: 3.2%
Iron Mountain is an information management service provider operating as a Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT). It’s a global data powerhouse with $6.9 billion in annual revenue that serves over 240,000 customers in 61 countries. The company has total storage volume of more than 740 million square feet of space.
It was founded in 1951 as Iron Mountain Atomic Storage Corporation. The original location was a depleted iron ore mine in Livingston, New York. It was used to provide a secure location for corporate records that could survive a nuclear blast.
Beyond the paranoia of the era, securing paper records turned out to be a practical business in high demand. Companies create massive paper trails over time of sensitive information that needs to be managed. Over the decades, through aggressive acquisitions and organic growth, the company grew large enough to go public and had the initial public offering on the NYSE in 1996.
Iron Mountain continued to make acquisitions and became established as an industry leader. In 2013, as the digital age blossomed, a data center division was established, and it became classified as a REIT in 2014. The company has since acquired data centers and boosted capacity in key markets.
Information management is big business these days. Iron Mountain’s customers include 95% of Fortune 1000 companies. The company estimates that the total addressable market for storage in information management is $170 billion, of which they currently only have $6.9 billion … and Iron Mountain is one of the biggest players.
Iron Mountain essentially operates in three segments: Records Management and Digital Solutions (DMI), Data Centers, and Asset Lifecycle Management (ALM). DMI is the original part of the business and still the biggest, accounting for 72% of revenue in 2025. But the exciting growth part of the business is in Data Centers and ALM.
DMI includes the old paper part of the business that is also transforming into digital services. Iron Mountain transports, stores, converts, shreds, and digitizes massive amounts of records. It may sound dull but there is a huge need for such services, and it generates consistent revenue. In fact, this segment has grown revenues every year for 37 consecutive years. DMI steadies the ship and delivers the reliable cash flow that fuels the dividend and investment in the higher growth areas.
While overall company revenues grew 12% in 2025, Data Center revenue increased 30% and ALM revenue grew 63% from the prior year. The two segments, which the company reports as just the Data Center segment, only account for 28% of companywide revenue but were responsible for two thirds of the revenue growth in 2025.
The data center segment has grown revenue by a compound annual growth rate of 25% since 2021. The segment currently operates 31 data centers, but it can nearly triple capacity from the current 488 MW to 1.3 GW in the next few years. The company expects to nearly double current capacity by adding 400 MW in just the next 24 months. According to management, there is sufficient backlog in orders to support over 25% revenue growth in 2026.
Asset Life Management (ALM) is a rapidly growing business with low capital investment requirements and Iron Mountain is a global leader. Companies have massive computer systems. These machines represent a significant expense and are extremely complicated and need to be managed. They need to be serviced like any machine.
They need routine maintenance and periodically more significant maintenance, like a car. At some point, they need to be refurbished or resold and the data on them must be transferred and secured. When they are scrapped it must be done in an environmentally compliant way. Large businesses aren’t qualified to do this themselves. These things increasingly need to be done by a professional company that knows what they’re doing.
The segment includes Enterprise, which is for large businesses in general, and Data Center Decommissioning. These huge computer component housing centers have on average about a five-year refresh cycle. The rapidly growing number of aging data centers require a significant process to retire old machines and set up new ones.
The current ALM market is estimated to be $35 billion per year with significant long-term growth potential. The market is also highly fragmented. Iron Mountain is a huge global player that currently has just $633 million annual revenue. The Data Center segment is expected to account for 40% of overall company revenue by 2028, up from 28% in 2025.
The Williams Companies Inc. (WMB)
Annual Yield: 2.8%
The Williams Companies Inc. (WMB) is involved in the transmission, gathering, processing, and storage of natural gas. It operates the large Transco and Northwest pipeline systems that transport gas to densely populated areas from the Gulf to the East Coast. Roughly 30% of the natural gas in the U.S. moves through Williams’ systems.
Like most other midstream energy companies, the overwhelming bulk of earnings are guaranteed by
long-term contracts. And those contracts have automatic inflation adjustments built in.
It also operates a near monopoly in its areas and doesn’t have to compete in price with other similar
companies. As a large and established player, it can easily grow with network expansion.
The earnings are highly reliable. The company also benefits from the fact that natural gas demand is growing in both the U.S. and overseas. It also should benefit from increased natural gas production and a reduced regulatory burden.
The company continues to raise future earnings guidance as business is booming. And thanks to the recent boom in oil and natural gas prices, the share price is soaring along with most other energy plays – and that’s on the heels of a 2025 in which it was one of the few midstream energy company stocks to have a good year.
How to Learn More
Cabot Dividend Investor has three related objectives: safety, dividend growth and current income. Subscribers are guided in how to mix and match our recommendations to meet whichever of these objectives is most important to you personally. Some subscribers choose to pursue only one or two objectives while some mix investments to secure all three.
Cabot Dividend Investor is for anyone who wants to receive income from his or her investment portfolio, now or in the future. If you need income now, you’ll focus on our current income recommendations from the Safe Income and High-Yield Tiers of the portfolio.
If you don’t need income now but anticipate needing it in the future (or just want to put the power of dividend growth to work for you), you’ll focus on our Dividend Growth Tier and may choose to reinvest your dividends—which you now know how to do!
If you’re interested in supercharging your income, consider a subscription to Cabot Income Advisor, where we use the Dividend Multiplier Strategy to achieve steady, low-risk gains.
It’s built on four trusted investment techniques, familiar to most investors... but we take those techniques to the next level of sophistication and yields.
Along with high-yield dividend stocks, tax-advantaged securities, and extraordinary dividend capture, we use the “Income Supercharger” — covered calls.
Regardless of whether or not you decide to subscribe to my advisories, I hope this report has been informative and educational, and you’ve learned a little more about dividend stocks—and how they can enhance your portfolio and create wealth that can last for years!
About the Expert
Tom Hutchinson is Chief Analyst of Cabot Dividend Investor and a Wall Street veteran with extensive experience in multiple areas within the financial world. His experience includes specialized work in mortgage banking, commodity trading and as a financial advisor to the nation’s largest investment banks.
Tom has created and actively managed investment portfolios for private investors, corporate clients, pension plans and 401Ks. He has a long track record of successfully building wealth as well as providing a high income while maintaining and growing principal. Tom has written extensively on various industries, individual companies and most every kind of investment for Motley Fool, StreetAuthority, NewsMax, and several of the nation’s largest online publications.
A Proven, Trusted Source
The Cabot Wealth Network was founded in 1970 by Carlton Lutts, a disciplined investor with an engineering mind who developed a proprietary stock picking system using technical and fundamental analyses.
Carlton personally researched and wrote the hugely influential Cabot Market Letter which recommended many big-time profitable trades.
Since then Cabot Wealth Network has grown to become one of the largest and most-trusted independent investment advisory publishers in the country, serving hundreds of thousands of investors across North America and around the world.