The Remarkable True Story of a “Dividend Millionaire”

IN 1995, Hayford Peirce, a science-fiction and mystery writer by avocation, sat down in a Tahitian café. He was 53 years old.

Peirce pulled out a legal pad and pen, and wrote down his list of stock investments. He had two groups: There were about a dozen high-yield but slow-growing stocks such as utilities and high-yield bonds.

The second group of stocks, seven in all, overlapped a little with the first. But these companies were comparatively high-growth, with a long history of increasing their dividends every year. All of them were well-known blue chips: Coca-Cola, General Electric, Johnson & Johnson, Kellogg, Merck, Pfizer, and Philip Morris. Philip Morris was Peirce's largest holding by far.

He predicted his high-growth portfolio would pay him about $14,000 in dividends in 1995 (the actual payout ended up being $14,267.50; the overall value of his portfolio back then was about $2 million). That would turn out to be 13.8% of his total income for the year, the rest coming from his low-growth "widows and orphans" stocks. "Let's see what would happen if we just increased this dividend payout by 10% every year for 30 years," he recalls saying to himself. Thus began his 30-year plan.

Fast-forward to 2017. It turns out, Peirce's dividend payouts have increased 8.54% annually over the past 22 years (see chart below). That's shy of his goal of 10% per annum, but it's been enough to make him a "dividend millionaire."

Image of a chart showing dividend increasing most years from 1995 to 2017.
Image of a chart showing dividend increasing most years from 1995 to 2017.

Source: Hayford Peirce 30-year plan spreadsheets; chart and calculations by author.

In aggregate, from 1995-2017, Peirce's dividends alone have paid him more than a million dollars—$1,148,079.84, to be exact.

That's $49,916.51 per year, on average.

Here's how he did it.

When Peirce eventually returned to his home in the U.S. back in 1995, he transferred his legal pad calculations to computerized spreadsheets. He's updated those spreadsheets annually for 22 years (and just completed the data entry for 2017).

Picture of man (Hayford Peirce) smiling at camera, wearing a polo shirt and a sweater, green plant behind and a window too.
Picture of man (Hayford Peirce) smiling at camera, wearing a polo shirt and a sweater, green plant behind and a window too.

Hayford Peirce in 1995, at the beginning of his 30-year plan. Image source: Hayford Peirce. Image used with permission.

His stated goal back then was to have his dividend income reach $250,000 in 2025. That would come on the back of a fairly concentrated investment portfolio. Today, it's comprised of 13 securities:

  • Four common stocks: Altria, Johnson & Johnson, Philip Morris International, and Kinder Morgan.

  • Eight master limited partnerships (MLPs): Alliance Resource Partners, Enbridge Energy, Energy Transfer, Enterprise Products, Hi-Crush, ONEOK Partners, Plains All American, and Suburban Propane.

  • One convertible bond.