3 Monster Dividend Stocks to Hold for the Next 10 Years

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Dividend King Hormel is deeply out of favor, but it has an important trick up its sleeve.

  • Realty Income is the largest net lease REIT and has three decades of dividend growth behind it.

  • Midstream giant Enterprise Products Partners has a big yield and plans for more distribution growth.

If you are looking for dividend stocks in today's market, you need to be selective. Given that the average stock in the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) is offering a paltry 1.3% yield, you can easily find higher-yielding investments. But finding high yields from companies you'd want to hold onto for a decade requires deeper consideration.

If your holding period is 10 years or longer, you'll find Hormel (NYSE: HRL), Realty Income (NYSE: O), and Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE: EPD) all worth a closer look today. Here's why.

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1. Hormel is painfully out of favor

Hormel's dividend yield is around 3.8%, which is nearly three times the level of the S&P 500 index. It also happens to be near the highest levels in the food maker's history. That said, with a market cap of $16 billion, Hormel is nowhere near the largest food company around. Where it stands toe to toe with the industry giants is its status as a Dividend King, which is a monster-sized achievement.

Hormel has issues to deal with, which is why the yield is so high today. Investors are worried that the future won't be as bright as the past. However, Hormel has an ace in the hole when it comes to dealing with adversity. The not-for-profit Hormel Foundation controls nearly 47% of the company's voting shares. The Hormel Foundation uses the dividends it collects from Hormel to fund its philanthropic efforts, so it has a long-term view that emphasizes conservatism and dividends.

In other words, this food maker doesn't have to make questionable short-term decisions to appease Wall Street. It can take its time and make decisions that will support long-term dividend growth. If that's what you are looking for, you might want to invest alongside The Hormel Foundation and buy Hormel Foods.

A pile of money with a sticky note that says passive income on it.
Image source: Getty Images.

2. Realty Income is the 800-pound, net-lease gorilla

Real estate investment trust (REIT) Realty Income has a dividend yield of 5.5%. The dividend has been increased annually for 30 consecutive years. It is a bit of a slow and steady tortoise, with dividend growth over that span coming in at around 4% a year, annualized. However, that is slightly faster than the long-term growth rate of inflation, so the buying power of the monthly dividend has grown steadily over time.