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44 Club- The Best DRIPs for a "Hank Aaron" Portfolio

One of my favorite baseball players was Hank Aaron, who wore number 44 and had a lifetime batting average of .305; in investing terminology, he was truly a “total return” player, asserts Chuck Carlson, editor of DRIP Investor.

I thought of Aaron as I was putting together my own “44 Club” for investors. The stocks in this club meet the following criteria: a current dividend yields of at least 4%; a 5-year annualized dividend growth of at least 4%; an ability to post moderate capital gains each year (at least 4%).

It is worth mentioning that all of these stocks offer direct-purchase plans whereby any investor may buy the first share and every share directly from the company.

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One reason I wrote this article is that too often investing gets framed as an “either/or” proposition — there are either low-yielding stocks with big dividend-growth potential; or there are high-yielding stocks with little or no dividend growth potential.

I don’t buy that framework. True, once you start getting in the 4% yield range or higher, dividend growth is harder to find. But there are exceptions, and I think some of the best exceptions are listed here. (I list my favorites in bold.)

One final point worth mentioning is the importance of dividend growth in the current inflationary environment. Owning stocks with high yields but static dividends is akin to owning traditional bonds — the cash flow has no inflation protection. However, much like floating-rate or inflation-protected bonds, high-yielding stocks with rising dividend streams provide some protection against inflation.

Here are five stocks from different industries that would comprise a diversified “44 Portfolio”:

AbbVie (ABBV) is a major pharmaceutical company. The firm’s leading drug is Humira, which is one of the biggest-selling drugs of all time. The risk of owning AbbVie is that the company turns out to be a one-trick pony. Humiragoes off patent in 2023. The good news is that the company has been bringing along other medicines, such as

Skyrizi and Rinvoq, to help offset the inevitable decline in Humiraonce it goes off patent. The stock is discounting some of the challenges; these shares trade at a 20% discount to their 52-week high.

However, yielding 4% and with 5-year dividend growth of 17%, AbbVie should continue to generate a healthy and rising cash-flow stream for investors. Minimum initial investment in the company’s direct-purchase plan is $250.