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2 Hot Warren Buffett Stocks That Raised Their Dividends This Year
Warren Buffett by The Motley Fool
Warren Buffett by The Motley Fool

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The equity portfolio of Warren Buffett's investment vehicle Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A)(NYSE: BRK.B) is larger than the gross domestic products of many small countries. So you can imagine the rivers of dividend payments the portfolio takes in on an annual basis.

This year has been quite a gusher in that respect for Berkshire, as two of the portfolio's largest holdings declared dividend raises. Let's dig into the payout enhancements from those two big-name companies, Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) and Bank of America (NYSE: BAC).

1. Apple

Of the two companies, Apple was the first to crank its distribution higher. It declared a 4% dividend raise in May, which pushed the quarterly payout to $0.24 per share. This doesn't exactly make it a high yielder at 0.5% based on the latest stock price.

Regardless, Apple is a cornerstone investment in Berkshire's stock portfolio, to the point where the tech giant comprises a whopping 49% of it. All told, the Berkshire Apple position is worth more than $178 billion at the current share price.

With that kind of commitment, you can bet that Buffett and company are among Apple's most significant and committed bulls. That belief in the company is paying off with the increased dividends -- the May raise marked the 11th year in a row it has upped the payout.

That low yield aside, in other ways Apple has been showing the characteristics of a mature dividend stock with modest growth (or even slight declines, as the company has reported in recent quarters).

Yet the foundational iPhone, now in its 15th (!) iteration, continues to be a hot seller, and services revenue keeps climbing to new highs. Meanwhile, as ever, management is doing a good job of keeping up those comparatively quite lofty net margins (26% in the most recently reported quarter).

We should never thoughtlessly copy the moves of a popular investor or portfolio manager. But Apple is a strong company that generates geysers of cash, and is happy to return a bit of it to its investors.

2. Bank of America

Any guesses as to which storied lender has the second-highest weighting in Berkshire's hallowed equity portfolio? Correct! It's Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), which comprises just under 9% of the total. After the Federal Reserve's recent set of (broadly quite successful) bank stress tests, Bank of America declared a dividend raise of 9%, to $0.24 per share per quarterly distribution. These days, that yields 3%.

The health of a bank is due to prudent management, of course, but it also depends rather heavily on the health of its economy.