These 3 Stocks Could be Tomorrow's High-Yielders

Dividend-growth stocks can do wonders for an investor's portfolio over time. The power of compounding can turn today's ho-hum yield into a stellar return if the growth rate of the dividend is high.

Consider the example of Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT), which has been growing its dividend roughly 15% a year. Today, the stock pays a dividend of $1.59 a share and yields roughly 2%. But if the dividend continues to grow at 15% rate, then the yield (on the original investment) climbs to almost 4% by year five and reaches almost 6% by year seven -- nearly triple the initial yield. (My example assumes 1,000 shares purchased today for $73, a total initial investment of $73,000.)

The key to successful dividend-growth investing is finding stocks that have a high likelihood of continuously raising dividends over time. To uncover these steady growers, I ran a screen for stocks that have 1) accelerating rates of earnings and/or cash flow growth; 2) modest dividend payout, which leaves room for more growth; and 3) strong cash positions and little debt.

Here are three high-quality stocks that met my criteria. Since all three of these companies only recently began paying cash dividends, they may be flying under the radar of some income investors. All are worthy to join the ranks of stocks like Verizon (NYSE: VZ) and Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) as part of a new generation of dividend-growth stocks.

1. Amgen (Nasdaq: AMGN)
Yield: 2%
Amgen is a pioneer in genetic engineering and has grown to become the world's largest biotechnology company. Amgen launched the biotechnology industry's first blockbuster medicines, including two of the most successful drugs in history -- Epogen, for treating anemia, and Neupogen, which helps cancer patients receiving chemotherapy avoid infections. Other blockbuster drugs include Enbrel for rheumatoid arthritis, Prolia for osteoporosis and Sensipar, for complications common in patients with kidney disease.

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Amgen has a potent new drug pipeline and may be first to market with a powerful new cholesterol-lowering medicine for patients who can't take standard medicines such as Lipitor (marketed by Pfizer (NYSE: PFE).) Amgen's new cholesterol drug has true blockbuster potential and addresses a $10-plus billion market. In addition, the company has new drugs for psoriasis, malignant melanoma, and gastric and ovarian cancer in its late-stage pipeline.

Based on the strength of its pipeline, analysts forecast 10% earnings growth for Amgen in each of the next five years, which is a big improvement from 6% yearly growth in the prior five. Amgen's profit margin of almost 34% is the envy of the biotech industry. In addition, the company has a cash stockpile exceeding $19.4 billion, or $25 a share. Although Amgen isn't debt-free, debt is manageable at 50% of capitalization and well covered by the company's $5 billion annual cash flow.