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3 No-Brainer Dividend Stocks to Buy and Hold for Decades to Come

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Buying and holding a stock over the long term requires conviction that the company will live up to investor expectations.

For growth stocks, that can mean unlocking the potential of a paradigm-shifting technology. In contrast, investors may expect dividend-paying companies to steadily boost their earnings and payouts over time, rewarding them with a one-two punch of passive income and capital gains.

Here's why Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT), American Water Works (NYSE: AWK), and Watsco (NYSE: WSO) stand out as ultra-reliable dividend stocks to buy now.

Water droplets fall from a person’s hand onto a plant sprouting from stacks of coins with a pink piggy bank in the background.
Image source: Getty Images.

The sell-off in Lockheed Martin is a buying opportunity

Daniel Foelber (Lockheed Martin): Defense companies that contract with the U.S. government and its allies can be highly reliable cash cows that generate stable income no matter what the economy is doing. But not all defense contractors have a high dividend yield.

Lockheed Martin is an exception. Twenty-two consecutive years of dividend increases paired with a beaten-down stock price have pushed Lockheed's yield up to 3% -- making it a solid source of passive income. That's a far higher yield than peers like RTX and Northrop Grumman.

The stock has sold off because earnings have been weak, the company reported losses from classified programs, and it lost a sizable contract to Boeing that many thought Lockheed was favored to win. These factors contribute to lackluster guidance, but that doesn't affect Lockheed's ability to pay and grow its dividend, given the company's reasonable payout ratio of 57%.

In addition to the dividend, Lockheed consistently buys back a ton of stock, allowing earnings per share (EPS) to grow faster than net income. Over the last decade, EPS has doubled while net income is up by half as much thanks to a 25% reduction in the share count. Buybacks can help keep a stock valuation in check because there are fewer shares and, therefore, more earnings per share.

Lockheed has a price-to-earnings ratio of just 20 -- which is a good price for a reliable dividend-paying company, especially considering that Lockheed's P/E accounts for one-off losses from the classified programs. All told, Lockheed is a balanced buy for risk-averse investors interested in boosting their passive income.

For dependable dividends, get your feet wet with American Water Works

Scott Levine (American Water Works): Finding stocks that have the resilience to continue paying dividends for decades is no easy feat, but it becomes easier when attention turns to American Water Works and its 2.1% forward dividend yield. The water utility stock generates steady revenue from its regulated water operations -- a business model that is about as dependable as they come -- appealing to those interested in a stream of passive income that will continue flowing for years to come.