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Dividend growth: quality, resilience and cash flow combined

Jacob Falkencrone 400x400
Jacob Falkencrone

Global Head of Investment Strategy

Key points:

  • Rising dividends signal strength and discipline in uncertain markets.
  • Dividend growth stocks can deliver both resilience and compounding over time.
  • Saxo’s Dividend Growth theme is a curated list of companies that investors can use as inspiration for further research.

The quiet power of rising payouts

Every spring, a select group of companies quietly hand their shareholders a raise.
No negotiations. No performance reviews. Just a higher dividend landing in your account, a sign that the business is not only surviving but thriving.

That small, steady pay rise is the essence of dividend growth investing. Behind every increase sits a company with consistent earnings, strong free cash flow and a commitment to rewarding shareholders year after year. It is an approach that values reliability over hype, and in a market where confidence can change overnight, that is a rare comfort.

For investors, dividend growth delivers more than income. It offers psychological stability, proof of progress, and a quietly compounding source of returns.

Beyond yield: the real meaning of dividend growth

Dividend growth is often misunderstood. It is not about chasing the highest yield, as those stocks can sometimes be the riskiest of all. Instead, it is about identifying companies that raise their payouts regularly and sustainably.

These are typically mature, cash-rich businesses with strong balance sheets and durable demand. They reinvest enough to grow while still rewarding shareholders with a rising income stream. The focus is quality over quantity, dependable compounding instead of one-off windfalls.

The strategy has proven itself over decades. Global dividend-growth indices have outperformed the broader market by roughly one percentage point per year on average since the mid-1990s, not because of luck but because companies that can steadily grow dividends tend to be better managed and more financially resilient.

Built for this market

In a world of higher-for-longer interest rates and inflation that refuses to fade, investors are rediscovering the appeal of getting paid to wait. When bond yields hover near 4% and growth stocks swing on every central-bank whisper, the reassurance of a rising dividend feels refreshingly tangible.

Dividend growth companies are built on recurring cash flows, prudent capital allocation and steady demand, the kind of attributes that matter when liquidity tightens and volatility returns. They tend to hold up better during downturns and help investors stay invested when sentiment turns.

And in behavioural-finance terms, that consistency matters. Investors who receive a growing income stream are less likely to panic-sell in turbulent markets, making dividend growth both a financial and psychological buffer.

Inside the 'Dividend Growth' theme

Saxo’s Dividend Growth theme highlights a curated selection of around ten high-quality global companies with strong records of increasing their dividends over time. It is designed as a starting point for investors who want to explore this timeless idea and identify candidates for their own portfolios.

The theme aims to strike a balance between focus and diversification, spanning multiple sectors and regions. Each company is chosen based on:

  • A proven, multi-year track record of dividend increases
  • Sustainable payout ratios and solid free-cash-flow generation
  • Healthy balance sheets and competitive advantages
  • A clear commitment to long-term shareholder returns

The goal is not to chase yield, but to capture steady, sustainable dividend growth from businesses built to last.

Meet a few of the dividend growers

PepsiCo – The global snacks and beverages powerhouse has raised its dividend for more than half a century. Its brand strength, scale and pricing power have helped it weather inflation and keep rewarding investors year after year.

Johnson & Johnson – A healthcare leader spanning pharmaceuticals and medtech. Predictable cash flows, high margins and an ironclad balance sheet have made J&J one of the most reliable dividend growers in the world.

Verizon Communications – A core player in U.S. telecoms, Verizon’s subscription-based model generates steady cash flow. While its growth is modest, its dividend remains well covered and supported by disciplined capital management.

Digital Realty Trust – A global operator of data centres, benefiting from the cloud and AI infrastructure boom. Long-term tenant contracts provide visible revenue streams, though rate sensitivity is worth monitoring.

Allianz SE – Europe’s insurance and asset-management giant combines underwriting profits with fee income from its investment arm. Strong solvency and capital discipline underpin a steadily rising dividend.

Deutsche Post (DHL Group) – The logistics backbone of global trade and e-commerce. Efficiency gains and a focus on higher-margin services have enabled consistent dividend increases despite economic cycles.

T. Rowe Price – A U.S. asset manager known for conservative finances and a net-cash balance sheet. It has lifted its dividend every year for decades, even through market corrections.

Each name tells a story of endurance. Different industries, same DNA: strong cash flow, sensible capital discipline and a long-term view.

The role in a resilient portfolio

Dividend growth stocks can form the steady core of a portfolio, blending income stability with the potential for capital appreciation. They complement broad-market exposure and balance out more cyclical or high-growth holdings.

Reinvesting dividends can amplify compounding over time, while the regular income stream can help investors stay patient during volatility, something behavioural research shows is key to long-term success.

For investors, a modest allocation to dividend growth can act as the quiet engine that keeps the portfolio moving forward, even when markets stall.

Easy access to the theme

The Dividend Growth theme gives investors a clear, diversified example of how this idea can look in practice. Transparent and reviewed periodically, it brings together companies with a shared focus on growing their payouts over time.

Investors who like the concept can then build their own exposure by selecting companies with consistent payout growth, solid cash generation and manageable debt. Where available, broader dividend-growth ETFs or funds can also serve as complements for those seeking regional or sector-specific flavour.

What to keep in mind

All companies face risks, also reliable dividend payers. Economic slowdowns can lead to stagnant or declining dividend growth, and in rare cases, dividends may be suspended if cash flows weaken or legal and restructuring costs rise.

Certain sectors, notably real estate and telecoms, can be sensitive to higher interest rates, while crowding into “bond-like” equities can create valuation risk. Currency fluctuations can also affect returns for international investors.

The key is quality discipline: monitor payout ratios, track free-cash-flow coverage, and ensure earnings growth supports dividend growth, not the other way around.

The compounding story investors can count on

Dividend growth is not about flash or hype. It is about owning businesses that quietly share their progress with investors, year after year.

In an age of uncertainty, these steady pay rises can make all the difference, helping portfolios compound, smoothing the emotional ride and keeping investors focused on what truly matters: long-term wealth creation.

With Saxo’s Dividend Growth theme as inspiration, investors can explore companies that follow this time-tested approach and build portfolios that benefit from a rising stream of payouts over time.

 

 

This material is marketing content and should not be regarded as investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee of future results.

The instrument(s) referenced in this content may be issued by a partner, from whom Saxo receives promotional fees, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo may receive compensation from these partnerships, all content is created with the aim of providing clients with valuable information and options.

 

 

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