Is there anything that makes an income-focused investor happier than an increase in their dividends?

That’s why Dividend Aristocrats have become a well-loved group of stocks since the era of low interest rates began.

[ad#Google Adsense 336×280-IA]A Dividend Aristocrat is a member of the S&P 500 that has raised its dividend for 25 years in a row or more.

It’s an impressive track record.

There are some companies that have raised their dividends for more than 50 years.

Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) has done it for 55 years. American States Water (NYSE: AWR) has raised its dividend each year for an incredible 62 years.

When that streak started, Dwight Eisenhower was president and Mickey Mantle was roaming centerfield for the New York Yankees.

I’ve always liked Dividend Aristocrats and other stocks with solid dividend-raising histories. (I call them Perpetual Dividend Raisers.) That’s because by lifting the dividend every year, their managements have set the bar very high.

Imagine what would happen if after six decades of annual dividend increases, American States Water did not hike its dividend. As Ricky Ricardo from I Love Lucy (in its fourth season 62 years ago) might say, the CEO would have “some ‘splainin’ to do.”

A CEO who did not raise the dividend after a long streak should probably get his or her resume together. Investors have come to expect annual dividend increases in these companies, and management teams work very hard to be able to provide them. If after 20 or 30 years, dividend boosts suddenly come to a halt, that suggests a drastic change in the company’s business or prospects.

Companies that raise their dividends every year help investors fight inflation.

Though inflation is low today, the historical average is more than 3% per year. That can meaningfully eat away at a person’s buying power. If prices rise just 3% per year, what costs $1 today would cost $1.34 in 10 years.

Even over the past 10 years of very low inflation, you need 19% more money to buy the same goods and services as you did in 2007.

Owning stocks that raise their dividends every year by more than the inflation rate increases your buying power.

If you’re using dividends as part of your income strategy in retirement, you not only keep up with inflation, but also beat it.

Let’s assume you’re generating $10,000 per year in dividend income, and your stocks grow their dividends by an average of 8% per year. Next year, you receive $10,800. At 3% inflation, you need only $10,300 to keep up. You now have an extra $500 to save, invest or spend.

Lastly, if you’re reinvesting your dividends, owning Perpetual Dividend Raisers helps you step on the gas of the compounding machine.

Let’s say you have a $100,000 portfolio of dividend stocks with an average yield of 4%, and it climbs by the historical average of the S&P 500. You reinvest the dividend.

After 10 years, your $100,000 will be worth $278,544, and you’ll receive about $5,300 per year in dividends.

After 20 years, your nest egg is worth $668,103. And the portfolio spins off $6,100 per year in dividends.

Not bad, right?

If instead of earning a flat 4%, your portfolio starts off yielding 4% – but the companies average an 8% dividend boost every year – the numbers increase significantly.

In 10 years, you have $310,764… $32,000 more than the first scenario. More importantly, you’re now generating $11,780 in dividends, more than double what you would have made if the company did not boost the payout.

In 20 years, the portfolio is worth $978,406 – a whopping 46% more than the earlier case. And if at that point you’re ready to stop reinvesting the dividend and take it as income, you’ll receive $38,290. That’s a far cry from the $6,100 you’d get without the dividend increases.

Investing in Perpetual Dividend Raisers can be the difference between a comfortable retirement and just scraping by.

Buy stocks that raise their dividends every year, and hold on to them for as long as you can. It’s the best way that I know to secure a wealthy retirement.

Good investing,

Marc

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Source: Wealthy Retirement