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3 Dividend ETFs to Buy With $2,000 and Hold Forever

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If you sense that growth stocks' long-lived leadership is finally waning, you're not imagining things. And that's not just because investors suddenly started locking in profits on the market's hottest tickers back in February, in response to new tariffs. There's a bigger mental reset taking shape here.

While the U.S. president's international trade-policy posturing has certainly played a part, growth actually began to lag less-risky investments (like value stocks and dividend payers) late last year. This shift is still bigger than any geopolitical standoff. So it might not be wrong for investors to switch strategic gears here...at least partially.

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Let's say you have a couple of thousand dollars (or any other amount) and you're ready to commit to a new kind of long-term investment. Here's a look at three fantastic dividend exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that would be at home in almost anyone's portfolio. Note that each of them offers something different, making them complementary holdings to one another.

ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats® ETF

Income-minded investors often forget that there's more to picking dividend stocks than just tracking down tickers with high dividend yields. You may be buying into a new position with strong payouts, but if those dividend payments don't grow much (if any) from one year to the next, you'll soon be losing ground to inflation.

The ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats® ETF (NYSEMKT: NOBL) sidesteps this potential problem.

If you're not familiar with them, Dividend Aristocrats (the term Dividend Aristocrats® is a registered trademark of Standard & Poor's Financial Services LLC, a division of S&P Global) are S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) constituents that have raised their annual per-share dividend payment for a minimum of 25 consecutive years. And some boast much better track records. Johnson & Johnson and Coca-Cola, for instance, have both upped their yearly dividend for over 60 years, while American States Water is now into its 70th straight year of annual dividend boosts.

The underlying philosophy of this index and the ProShares ETF that mirrors it is pretty obvious: Any company capable of maintaining such persistent payout increases is clearly doing something right, and will likely be able to continue growing its dividend indefinitely.

Now, there's an arguable downside here: The yield isn't exactly thrilling. The ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats® ETF has a trailing yield of a little less than 2.1%, which could easily be topped by a handful of carefully selected blue chips.