Want Decades of Passive Income? Buy This ETF and Hold It Forever.

In This Article:

Are you at a point in your investing life where you just want to tuck some money away and collect dividends from it? Well, good news! You've got plenty of simple options. A single exchange-traded fund (ETF) could do the trick, in fact, even if you consider yourself a sophisticated investor capable of handling more complicated positions.

That fund? The Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (NYSEMKT: VIG). Here's the deal.

What's the Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF?

An ETF is simply a basket of stocks that makes it easy for you to diversify your holdings. Most of these funds -- which are bought and sold just like ordinary stocks -- hold anywhere from a few dozen to a few hundred individual equities. These baskets, of course, reflect the ever-changing collective value of all the holdings in them.

Just as the name suggests, the Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF holds a bunch of dividend-paying stocks that are not only likely to continue making these payments, but to grow these payments over time. Indeed, this particular fund is built to reflect the S&P U.S. Dividend Growers Index, which requires a company to have upped its annual payout for at least 10 consecutive years to be named a constituent.

As of the most recent look, 338 tickers were eligible to be a part of the S&P U.S. Dividend Growers Index. Most of these companies are, of course, able to maintain this growth track record for far longer once they reach this milestone.

Admittedly, this fund's trailing dividend yield of 1.6% is less than thrilling. It's only a tad better than the S&P 500's yield of around 1.2%, and that average includes a bunch of stocks that don't pay any dividends at all!

However, there's more to the story.

Think (and see the) bigger picture

Plowing into dividend stocks with unusually large yields is not an uncommon mistake, particularly for newer investors. You might do better than average right out of the gate. If you're looking for decades of passive income, however, these names could ultimately do you more harm than good.

High-yielding stocks often sport those higher yields for a reason. More often than not, the market rightly fears that the underlying dividend payments aren't apt to grow much, if at all. Take well-known consumer staples company Kraft Heinz as an example. Its forward-looking yield of 5.1% is well above the current norm for blue chips of its kind. But its quarterly payment hasn't budged since being lowered in 2019, and there's no evidence that any dividend growth is on the horizon.