Smart Dividend Portfolio Edition #73: Income Recipe

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Dear Investor,

Welcome to the 73rd edition of TipRanks’ Smart Dividend Portfolio & Newsletter.

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Market-Moving News: Aug 11, 2025

Stocks rebounded on Friday, closing the week firmly in the green – the market’s third winning week out of the last four. The S&P 500 (SPX) rallied for its strongest week since late June, closing on the brink of a record after gaining 2.43%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) finished the week up 1.35%. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq-100 (NDX) surged by 3.73%, reaching a new record.

Technology and Consumer Discretionary sectors led the charge, while healthcare lagged amid tariff and clinical-trial headwinds. Tech stocks pulled major investor inflows, especially into semiconductor and AI-related names.

After the prior week’s pull‑back, investors bought the dip again, demonstrating conviction in the rally’s viability – grounded in solid fundamentals. Around 90% of S&P 500 companies have reported Q2 earnings, with 81% beating expectations – the best since Q3 2023. In tech, more than 90% have exceeded forecasts. These strong results have prompted analysts to lift Q3 earnings expectations, particularly for Energy, Communication Services, Technology, and Financials.

Despite ongoing tariff-related and broader macro uncertainties, the U.S. corporate sector remains resilient – with expectations that this strength will persist, assuming the economy holds. Company leadership and boards of directors are reflecting that confidence through share repurchases. In July alone, U.S. companies announced a record $166 billion in stock buybacks – the highest for any July on record, and year-to-date repurchases now total nearly $926 billion, exceeding the previous record.

Additionally, IPO activity is robust – as of August 5, 2025, there have been 202 IPOs in the U.S., up 80% over the same period last year. This resurgence is widely seen as driven by growth and profitability – quite distinct from the speculative SPAC wave in 2021.

The divergence between Wall Street and Main Street sentiment is narrowing – both appear to be looking past the dire headlines on tariffs, economic, and geopolitical risks. New business creation in the U.S. has surged since November, with July business applications hitting their highest levels since late 2007.

President Donald Trump claimed tariffs were “having a huge positive impact on the stock market,” adding that “hundreds of billions of dollars are pouring into our country’s coffers,” supporting the economy and equities. Whether tariffs deserve credit is debatable – but the fear factor seems much less than expected.

The average effective U.S. tariff rate is at its highest level since the Great Depression – yet today’s economy and corporate sector are far more advanced and adaptive. Tariffs have already nudged prices upward, and a short-term inflation bump is expected throughout this year and next.

Still, the U.S. economy – dynamic and resilient – is adjusting. Companies are shifting supply chains, and because tariffs were announced ahead of time, they had ample time to prepare. Some sectors may even benefit from increased domestic investment and reshoring. On the household front, while tariffs could dent purchasing power via higher prices, the impact should be limited and temporary, not a sustained driver of inflation. Future trade agreements are expected to ease tensions and help contain inflation and growth risks.

Last week’s rally underscores U.S. resilience – stocks advanced even as Trump’s tariff rollout accelerated. In fact, some signs of economic softness may have aided the rally, by heightening odds of a 0.25% rate cut in September.

With valuations rich but still not technically overbought, a rate cut could inject fresh momentum heading into the Q3 earnings season. Nevertheless, analysts broadly agree that the path ahead may remain choppy, with trade, macro, and geopolitical developments likely to test investor resolve.

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This Week’s Quality Dividend Stock Idea

Sysco Corp. (SYY) is a global leader in foodservice distribution, supplying a broad range of food and related products to restaurants, healthcare facilities, educational institutions, and hospitality businesses. The company operates an extensive logistics and warehousing network that supports efficient delivery across North America and international markets. Sysco leverages supply chain optimization, customer service innovation, and strategic acquisitions to expand its scale and strengthen capabilities. Through continued investment in technology and sustainability initiatives, the company seeks to drive long-term growth, boost operational efficiency, and deliver lasting value to its stakeholders.

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Strategic Ascent

Founded in the late 1960s and publicly listed soon after, Sysco Corp. has grown from a modest enterprise into the world’s largest foodservice distributor.  Its rise has been fueled by a dual strategy: steady organic expansion and a consistent pace of strategic acquisitions that have extended its geographic reach and strengthened its capabilities in specialized product categories.

The company’s origins trace back to the merger of nine independent food distributors, a move that positioned Sysco to meet the diverse needs of restaurants, healthcare institutions, educational facilities, and lodging providers. Over time, it expanded beyond U.S. borders, establishing a strong presence across Canada, Europe, and Latin America. Today, Sysco serves hundreds of thousands of customers worldwide.

Earnings growth has been reinforced by continuous investment in supply chain infrastructure, digital platforms, and specialized distribution channels. In recent years, Sysco has prioritized high-margin, value-added services such as menu consultation, inventory optimization, and customized logistics. With a vast product assortment, multi-temperature logistics infrastructure, and unmatched scale, Sysco enjoys significant competitive advantages in the highly fragmented U.S. foodservice market, which exceeds $360 billion annually.

Today, Sysco is listed #56 on the Fortune 500 list with a market capitalization of around $39 billion, with trailing twelve months’ (TTM) revenues of around $81 billion.

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Beyond Borders

In recent years, Sysco has executed a focused mergers and acquisitions strategy aimed at broadening its market reach and diversifying its product mix, with particular emphasis on high-demand categories such as specialty foods and fresh produce. The company’s acquisition playbook has focused on strengthening regional distribution networks, enhancing specialty capabilities, and expanding into value-added and fresh-prepared product lines – areas increasingly critical to growth in the evolving foodservice industry.

Sysco’s first major step toward global diversification came in 2014 with the purchase of a 50% stake in Pacific Star Foodservice, a foodservice distributor in Mexico. However, the company divested its stake in this joint venture partnership in the second quarter of FY25 as part of the company’s portfolio optimization strategy. Two years later, the company achieved a pivotal international milestone with its $3.1 billion acquisition of the Brakes Group, significantly expanding its European footprint and adding approximately 50,000 new customers in the restaurant, hospitality, and education sectors. The Brakes deal solidified Sysco’s position as a global leader in foodservice distribution.

In the U.S., Sysco reinforced its regional operations with a series of strategic purchases. It acquired HFM FoodService in 2017 in Hawai’i – later rebranded as Sysco Hawai‘i in 2019 – and followed in 2018 with the acquisition of Doerle Food Services in Louisiana. In parallel, Sysco extended its reach in Europe with the purchase of Kent Frozen Foods in the U.K.

The company accelerated its push into specialty and fresh offerings in 2021, acquiring Greco & Sons, a leading distributor of Italian specialty foods; Paragon Foods and Medina Foodservice through its FreshPoint division; and The Coastal Companies, a major supplier of fresh produce and specialty products.

Momentum continued in 2023 with Sysco’s acquisition of Edward Don & Company, a leading foodservice equipment and supplies distributor that strengthened its kitchen design and logistics capabilities. That same year, Sysco Ireland announced plans to acquire Ready Chef, enhancing its produce operations in the region. In the second quarter of FY25, the company further deepened its European presence with the purchase of Campbell’s Prime Meat, a well-established Scottish supplier of premium meat and seafood.

Not all acquisition efforts have succeeded. In 2015, Sysco terminated a proposed $3.5 billion deal to acquire its largest U.S. rival, US Foods, after regulators blocked the merger on antitrust grounds – a move that underscored the competitive intensity of the foodservice distribution market. The company also abandoned a related plan to sell 11 US Foods facilities to Performance Food Group (PFG), a transaction rendered unnecessary when the US Foods merger collapsed.

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Power of Scale

Sysco operates a vertically integrated foodservice distribution model, generating revenue by sourcing, marketing, and delivering food and related products to more than 730,000 customer locations across North America and Europe. Its customers include restaurants, healthcare and educational institutions, hotels, and other food-away-from-home venues.

The company purchases from suppliers ranging from major food brands to local farms and specialty producers at wholesale prices, then sells to customers at marked-up rates. This markup reflects value-added services, including just-in-time delivery, inventory management, menu consultation, and data analytics. Profitability is further supported by blending higher-margin private-label products with branded offerings, as well as by providing specialty logistics, kitchen design, and equipment supply services.

In FY25, restaurants accounted for 60% of Sysco’s sales, while other customers – such as cafeterias, bakeries, caterers, churches, and civic organizations – contributed 17%. The remaining 23% came from healthcare, education, and the travel and leisure sectors.

U.S. Foodservice Operations include the core Broadline business – custom-cut meats, seafood, fresh produce, imported goods, and kitchen supplies – plus Specialty operations such as FreshPoint (produce), the Specialty Meats and Seafood Group, Greco & Sons (Italian cuisine), and Edward Don & Company, acquired in FY2024 for restaurant equipment and supplies. Specialty categories are outpacing the core Broadline segment, and Edward Don has boosted both revenue and operating income.

In Q4 2025, the segment’s total case volume1 declined slightly by 0.3% year-over-year, an improvement from the steeper drop in Q3. Local case volume, reflecting sales to independent restaurants and smaller chains, fell 1.5% but improved by 200 basis points from the prior quarter. Excluding the exit from a low-margin FreshPoint produce business, the decline was closer to 1%, signaling stabilization. National account volumes2 grew 1.3%, led by demand from foodservice management companies, schools, and the travel and leisure sectors. Importantly, gross profit from these accounts rose nearly three times faster than volume growth, reflecting a shift toward higher-margin customers and more favorable contracts.

June marked the strongest month of the quarter for Sysco’s local business, with momentum extending into July. This rebound was aided by better restaurant traffic and internal initiatives to improve customer retention, service quality, targeted account acquisition, and customer loyalty.

Sysco’s International segment distributes food and non-food products across Canada, Mexico, the Bahamas, Costa Rica, Panama, and various export markets in the Americas, as well as the U.K., France, Ireland, and Sweden.

In Q4 FY2025, international revenue grew 3.6% year-over-year. Excluding the sale of Mexico operations, growth was 8.3%, supported by a 4% increase in local case volume, particularly among independent restaurants and hospitality clients. This drove the segment’s seventh consecutive quarter of double-digit operating income growth, with Q4 operating income up by 20.1%. Canada benefited from expanded distribution capacity, especially in Toronto. In the U.K. and Ireland, logistics upgrades such as the “Sysco Your Way” platform and local sales expansion boosted customer satisfaction. Latin America saw rising demand from the post-pandemic dining recovery.

SYGMA, Sysco’s customized U.S. distribution arm, serves quick-service restaurant chains with tailored foodservice solutions. SYGMA delivered strong results in the fourth quarter, with revenue up 5.9% and full-year revenue increasing 8.3%, driven by major new customer contracts. Operating income rose 12.5%, marking a record year.

Growth was fueled by onboarding large chain clients and improving operations through route optimization, upgraded logistics technology, and higher service levels. These factors expanded margins, allowing profits to grow faster than sales. For FY2026, management expects growth to normalize to mid-single digits as the exceptional boost from the SYGMA segment’s recent large contract wins will no longer add outsized growth.

1-Case volume reflects the number of product cases sold to customers in a given period and is a key driver of Sysco’s top-line growth. A case is the smallest packaged unit sold from our warehouses, potentially containing multiple bulk-packed items. While case size is generally consistent across locations and periods due to warehouse design, it can vary in international operations.

2-National account volume refers to sales and distribution to large, multi-location customers, such as major restaurant chains, hotel groups, healthcare networks, or institutions, operating across multiple regions in the country.

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Growth Playbook

To support growth, Sysco is retaining experienced sales staff, expanding loyalty programs, and deploying AI-powered tools to optimize inventory, forecast demand, and reduce waste. The company continues to invest in expanding both U.S. and international operations, aiming to capture demand across customer segments.

International growth remains a key engine, with increased sales supported by digital upgrades and better pricing relevance. These efforts have helped double margins in recent years. Sysco is also deepening relationships with healthcare, education, and travel customers through cross-selling and enhanced digital integration.

Sysco has invested heavily in technology and logistics to improve customer experience in international markets. A new $100 million distribution facility near London, set to open in early 2026, will be the largest in the U.K., increasing capacity and automation for fresh and frozen products. For FY2026, the company plans to expand capacity and sales teams in growth markets such as Toronto, Dublin, and London, while enhancing its technology infrastructure. Management expects continued double-digit operating income and case volume growth internationally.

Domestically, Sysco is focused on rebuilding momentum in its local business. In FY2026, the company plans to strengthen its local business after a challenging prior year. The turnover in its sales employees, which had led to customer losses, stabilized in Q4 FY2025. Many of the sales hires made in 2024 are now reaching the 12–18-month tenure mark, a period when productivity historically improves. To build on this momentum, sales headcount is expected to grow 4% in FY2026, following substantial hiring in the prior two years, supported by enhanced training programs.

To deepen customer relationships, Sysco is rolling out “Perks 2.0,” an upgraded loyalty program targeting high-value customers with premium services, aimed at boosting retention and wallet share. Additionally, its AI-powered CRM tool, “AI 360,” will be deployed nationwide to assist sales representatives with real-time pricing, product information, and recommendations. Early pilots of the tool have shown high engagement.

The company is also testing a “price agility” program, giving sales reps flexibility to respond instantly to customer price requests. While not expected to significantly impact FY2026 results, it is seen as a long-term lever for profitable growth. To maintain margins, reps are trained to offset price concessions through cross-selling higher-margin products, especially FreshPoint produce.

Sysco’s cost per case is expected to improve as fixed expenses, such as facility, fleet, and labor, are spread over higher sales volumes, improving per-unit efficiency. This operational leverage is a key margin driver in food distribution. However, the expiration of noncompete agreements for sales staff poses a risk. The departure of a sales rep could lead to customer losses or higher churn, though management notes most losses occur soon after a sales rep leaves, not at the contract’s end. Any later “ripple effect” from noncompete expirations is seen as a smaller threat.

Sysco maintains a disciplined approach to M&A and sees AI, automation, and scale as central to driving future efficiency and margin expansion. With its broad distribution footprint, diversified operations, and strategic investments, the company is positioned to deliver steady earnings growth and robust free cash flow in the years ahead.

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Profit Pulse

Over the past three years, Sysco has delivered consistent top and bottom-line growth, with revenues and earnings per share (EPS) rising at CAGR of 5.8% and 12.2%, respectively. This momentum reflects the company’s scale-driven efficiencies, expansion into specialty categories, and an improving sales mix. The trajectory has been supported by the post-pandemic rebound in the food-away-from-home sector, targeted acquisitions in specialty foods and equipment distribution, and pricing actions aimed at offsetting inflationary pressures.

In the fourth quarter of fiscal 2025, Sysco reported sales of $21.1 billion, a 2.8% increase from the prior year and slightly ahead of market expectations. Excluding the impact of the divestiture of its Mexico operations, revenue grew 3.7%, driven by balanced contributions from its core U.S. Foodservice business, the International segment, and SYGMA.

Adjusted operating income rose 1.1% to $1.1 billion, underscoring the company’s cost discipline and operational resilience. Adjusted EPS climbed 6.5% year-over-year to $1.48, exceeding consensus estimates of $1.38. This performance was fueled by ongoing strategic sourcing initiatives and efficiency gains, which more than offset softer local case volumes earlier in the quarter.

Gross profit advanced 3.9% to $4 billion, while gross margin improved by 19 basis points to 18.9%. The margin expansion was supported by higher profit per case, a more favorable product mix, and disciplined sourcing strategies that strengthened pricing power. Adjusted EBITDA increased 1.8% to $1.3 billion, highlighting Sysco’s capacity to generate steady earnings in a mixed demand environment.

Looking ahead, Sysco has set a measured but growth-oriented outlook for fiscal 2026. The company expects net sales to reach approximately $84.5 billion at the midpoint of guidance, in line with analyst forecasts. This projection factors in about 2% pricing inflation, consistent across U.S. and international markets, along with 2% to 3% growth from volume and M&A activity. The divestiture of the Mexico business will create a modest 50-basis-point drag on year-over-year comparisons.

Adjusted EPS is projected at $4.55 at the midpoint, representing a 2% increase from fiscal 2025 but below Wall Street’s estimate of $4.68. The outlook includes a $100 million headwind – about $0.16 per share – from lapping unusually low incentive compensation expenses in the prior year. Excluding that factor, underlying EPS growth is expected in the 5% to 7% range, supported by operational efficiencies and continued strategic sourcing benefits.

For the first quarter of fiscal 2026, management anticipates adjusted EPS growth between 1% and 3%, bolstered by procurement gains and a normalized incentive structure. Capital expenditures are projected at roughly $700 million, less than 1% of sales, with funding directed toward growth initiatives, maintenance, digital platform enhancements, supply chain upgrades, and international expansion.

Sysco ended fiscal 2025 with a net debt-to-EBITDA ratio of 2.85x, higher than the sector median of 2.43x but comfortably within investment-grade thresholds. The company holds long-term credit ratings of “BBB” with a stable outlook from both S&P and Fitch, reflecting a solid financial position. For fiscal 2026, Sysco aims to reduce net debt-to-EBITDA to between 2.5x and 2.75x, maintaining its investment-grade profile while continuing disciplined capital allocation.

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Return Resilience

Sysco has long prioritized rewarding shareholders through a disciplined combination of dividends and share repurchases. As a Dividend King, the company has raised its annual dividend for 55 consecutive years, an achievement that reflects the stability of its cash flow and the resilience of its business model. Over the past five years, the annual payout has grown by 3.48%, with the most recent increase of 6% in fiscal 2026 bringing the dividend to $2.16 per share. At a current yield of 2.59%, Sysco slightly outpaces the consumer defensive sector average of 2.5%. Based on adjusted earnings, the company distributes 46.4% of its profits to shareholders.

In fiscal 2025, Sysco returned approximately $2.3 billion to shareholders, including $1.3 billion in share repurchases and $1 billion in dividends, highlighted by a quarterly cash dividend of $0.54 per share in Q4. By fiscal 2026, the company expects to have returned about $21.5 billion in cumulative cash to investors over 12 years. For fiscal 2026, management is targeting roughly $1 billion in buybacks and $1 billion in dividends.

Share repurchases remain a core element of Sysco’s capital return strategy, serving both to offset dilution from stock-based compensation and to opportunistically retire shares when valuations are attractive. In May 2021, Sysco’s Board of Directors approved a share repurchase program to authorize the repurchase of up to $5 billion of the company’s common stock, which will remain available until fully utilized.

Strong cash generation underpins these returns. In fiscal 2025, operating cash flow reached $2.5 billion, supported by consistent earnings performance and disciplined working capital management. Free cash flow totaled $1.8 billion, slightly below the prior year due to higher cash taxes, increased interest costs from rising rates and incremental borrowings, and timing-related shifts in inventory and receivables tied to international expansion. Despite these headwinds, Sysco maintained a healthy cash flow margin that continues to fund both investment and shareholder returns.

Profitability metrics remain industry leading. Sysco’s ROIC and ROE rank in the top 10% of the sector, while its ROA is in the top 20%. The company’s operational execution has translated into a modest 7% gain in its stock price over the past year, driven by record segment profitability, successful acquisitions, and strong market fundamentals in the food service sector.

From a valuation standpoint, Sysco trades at a modest premium to the sector median on non-GAAP trailing and forward P/E ratios, yet remains more than 25% below its historical averages. Relative to peers such as U.S. Foods and Performance Food Group, Sysco sits in the lower valuation range across trailing and forward P/E, price-to-cash flow, and EV/EBITDA multiples.

Analysts also remain bullish on the stock, with consensus forecasts pointing to a 7.4% upside from current levels, and some analysts projecting gains approaching 15%. Optimism centers on Sysco’s expanding international presence, specialty category growth, and continued productivity improvements.

A discounted cash flow (DCF) analysis further supports the bullish view, indicating the stock may be undervalued by about 42% offering meaningful upside for long-term investors seeking high-quality, cash-generating compounders.

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Investing Takeaway

Sysco offers a compelling blend of income stability and steady growth for dividend-focused investors. As a long-standing Dividend King, the company has an unbroken track record of annual dividend increases spanning decades, reflecting the resilience of its business model and cash flows. Its most recent increase further strengthens its appeal, with a yield that stands slightly above the consumer defensive sector average. Sysco maintains a balanced payout policy that leaves room for continued growth, supported by strong free cash flow generation. In addition to dividends, the company regularly repurchases shares, enhancing overall shareholder returns. Backed by its dominant market position, operational efficiencies, and expanding international footprint, Sysco is well-positioned to sustain and grow its distributions. Trading at a discount to its historical valuation range, the stock offers income-oriented investors both dependable payouts and potential long-term capital appreciation.

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Dividend Investor Portfolio

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Portfolio News

Amgen (AMGN) delivered a robust second quarter in 2025, with strong demand for its key therapies driving better-than-expected results. Revenue rose 9% year-over-year to $9.2 billion, surpassing consensus estimates of $8.9 billion. The increase was driven by a 13% jump in product volumes, which more than offset a slight decline in net selling prices. Growth was broad-based, with fifteen products achieving double-digit sales gains. Cholesterol drug Repatha climbed 31%, fueled by greater patient access, while osteoporosis treatment Evenity advanced 32% on rising adoption in both U.S. and international markets.

Earnings performance was equally strong. GAAP EPS nearly doubled to $2.65, while adjusted EPS grew 21% to $6.02, exceeding Street expectations and reflecting operating leverage alongside disciplined cost control. Free cash flow edged down to $1.9 billion, pressured by deferred tax payments and increased capital investments to support future growth. Buoyed by the quarter’s momentum, Amgen raised its 2025 guidance, projecting midpoint revenue of $35.5 billion, above the $35.4 billion consensus, and midpoint adjusted EPS of $20.8. Capital expenditures are expected to be about $2.3 billion, and share repurchases are not anticipated to exceed $500 million.

EOG Resources (EOG) kicked off the second quarter of 2025 with impressive operational strength, tightening the narrative between production growth and financial discipline. Output rose sharply, with total production averaging 1.13 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd), comfortably above the prior-year rate of 1.047 million boepd, helping to offset a near-20% slide in Brent crude prices. On the earnings front, EOG delivered adjusted net income of $1.3 billion, or $2.32 per share, beating Wall Street expectations of approximately $2.21.  The company posted total revenues of $5.5 billion, a decline of 8.8% year-over-year, above Street estimates of $5.4 billion.

The company translated operational efficiency into nearly $1 billion in free cash flow, continuing its commitment to returning capital by distributing $528 million in dividends and repurchasing $600 million of stock.

Strategically, EOG bolstered its portfolio by closing its acquisition of Encino Acquisition Partners, which unlocked a stronger foothold in Utica and Marcellus and raised its 2025 average production guidance to 1.224 million boepd. Meanwhile, full-year capex expectations rose to $6.2–$6.4 billion.

ExxonMobil (XOM) has begun production at Yellowtail, its fourth oil project in Guyana’s offshore Stabroek block, boosting the block’s total installed capacity to over 900,000 barrels per day. Yellowtail’s One Guyana floating production storage and offloading vessel (FPSO), the largest on the block, can produce 250,000 barrels per day and store up to 2 million barrels. Production began four months ahead of schedule, advancing Exxon’s goal of reaching 1.7 million boe/day by 2030 from eight planned developments in the Stabroek block, which holds more than 11 billion barrels of recoverable resources.

In Trinidad and Tobago, Exxon is set to secure acreage in an ultra-deepwater zone comprising seven blocks northwest of Stabroek. The deal includes a signing bonus and a three-phase exploration program with seismic surveys and drilling. Separately, in Libya, Exxon signed an MoU with the National Oil Corporation to study four offshore blocks in the Sirte Basin, marking its return more than a decade after exiting due to security concerns.

The ex-dividend date for ExxonMobil is August 15, and its payment date is September 10.

Kroger’s (KR) ex-dividend date is August 15, and its payment date is September 1.

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Recent Trades

None at the moment, although we are considering adding a stock to our portfolio when the market conditions allow for an attractive entry point. Stay tuned.

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Portfolio Attributes

Dividend Portfolio Yield
Expected Dividend Growth Expected Annual Income
4.00% +6.79% $6,075.05
Yield-on-Cost Adjusted, Weighted
 Average Analyst 12-Month Growth Outlook 10K Per Stock at the Time of Purchase

Current Portfolio

 

 

Name EX-Dividend Date Payment Date Yield on Cost  Annual DPS 
Automatic Data Processing (ADP) Sep 12, 2025 Oct 01, 2025 2.46% $6.16
Amgen (AMGN) Aug 22, 2025 Sep 12, 2025 3.27% $9.52
BlackRock (BLK) Sep 09, 2025 Sep 23, 2025 2.61% $20.84
Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS) Oct 02, 2025 Oct 29, 2025 5.98% $3.2
EOG Resources (EOG) Oct 17, 2025 Oct 31, 2025 3.06% $4.08
ExxonMobil (XOM) Aug 15, 2025 Sep 10, 2025 3.64% $3.96
IBM (IBM) Aug 08, 2025 Sep 10, 2025 3.14% $6.72
JPMorgan Chase (JPM) Oct 07, 2025 Oct 31, 2025 3.43% $6.00
Kroger (KR) Aug 15, 2025 Sep 01, 2025 3.08% $1.40
LyondellBasell (LYB) Aug 26, 2025 Sep 03, 2025 5.74% $5.48
PepsiCo (PEP) Sep 09, 2025 Sep 30, 2025 3.8% $5.69
Philip Morris (PM) Sep 25, 2025 Jul 17, 2025 6.06% $5.40
Qualcomm (QCOM) Sep 04, 2025 Sep 25, 2025 2.36% $3.56
VICI Properties (VICI) Sep 18, 2025 Oct 06, 2025 5.22% $1.73
Verizon (VZ) Oct 09, 2025 Nov 04, 2025 6.09% $2.71

 

NameEX-Dividend DatePayment DateYield on Cost Annual DPS

 

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Disclaimer

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