The post The Case For Buying Smaller Dividends That Grow Faster appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A share of Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) paid $0.25 per quarter in dividends in 1999. That same share pays $1.34 per quarter in 2026. The stock price has moved through plenty of cycles since then, but the income stream alone has more than quintupled without the investor doing anything except holding.
That trajectory is the real case for owning smaller dividends that can grow.
Income-focused buyers often gravitate toward 8% to 14% yields offered by covered-call funds, mortgage REITs, and business development companies. Those products can solve cash flow this quarter. They may not solve it 20 years from now if distributions are cut or principal erodes.
Run the numbers on a $500,000 portfolio:
At a 10% static yield: $50,000 in year one and $50,000 in year 15, before any inflation loss or principal change.
At a 1.7% blended yield growing 9% annually: about $8,500 in year one, with the dollar income roughly doubling every eight years.
The dividend grower catches the static 10% yielder after about 21 annual increases and keeps going if the growth rate holds. The shares are still yours, but the key assumption is that the underlying business keeps earning enough to support the higher payout.
The compounding mechanic is yield on cost. The quoted yield resets daily against today’s share price. The yield against your original cost rises as the dividend grows. A Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) shareholder today collects a quarterly dividend of $0.91 per share, up from $0.08 in 2004.
The long-term return record often reinforces the story, but the comparison has to be made carefully. Price return and total return are not the same, and covered-call ETFs have shorter or different histories depending on the fund. A cleaner test is to compare dividend growers, REITs, BDCs, and covered-call funds over the same dates with distributions reinvested.
The blend looks unimpressive on a yield screen. It looks very different on a 25-year income statement. Lowe’s rounds out the same playbook with a quarterly dividend lifted to $1.25 in 2026, a 4% increase from the prior $1.20 payout.
Three concrete steps for investors willing to trade headline yield for compounding:
Anchor on actual spending. The income a dividend-growth portfolio has to replace is often lower than gross salary once payroll taxes, retirement contributions, and some work-related costs disappear. Shrinking the income target shrinks the capital target by the same proportion.
Compare total returns across income categories. The 10-year Treasury recently sat near 4.4%, so any higher-yield strategy should be judged against both its income and principal record. A fund that pays a large distribution but loses capital may not be creating as much income as the yield suggests.
A 1.7% yield that grows can eventually outperform a 10% yield that stands still, but only if the dividend growth continues long enough. That is the real trade-off. A high yield can solve the first paycheck. A growing dividend can solve the later ones, when inflation and time have done the most damage.
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The post The Case For Buying Smaller Dividends That Grow Faster appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


