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Nike (NYSE:NKE) declares $0.22/share quarterly dividend, 10% increase from prior dividend of $0.20.

Forward yield 1.18%

Payable Jan. 2; for shareholders of record Dec. 3; ex-div Nov. 30.
(11-15-2018, 05:46 PM)EricL Wrote: [ -> ]Nike (NYSE:NKE) declares $0.22/share quarterly dividend, 10% increase from prior dividend of $0.20.

Forward yield 1.18%

Payable Jan. 2; for shareholders of record Dec. 3; ex-div Nov. 30.

Sweet!  This holding has been very good to me in terms of dividend growth and price appreciation.  V, COST, HD, and SBUX have been like that as well.  Wish I could find more growth and income stocks.
(11-15-2018, 11:03 PM)RyanCMason Wrote: [ -> ]
(11-15-2018, 05:46 PM)EricL Wrote: [ -> ]Nike (NYSE:NKE) declares $0.22/share quarterly dividend, 10% increase from prior dividend of $0.20.

Forward yield 1.18%

Payable Jan. 2; for shareholders of record Dec. 3; ex-div Nov. 30.

Sweet!  This holding has been very good to me in terms of dividend growth and price appreciation.  V, COST, HD, and SBUX have been like that as well.  Wish I could find more growth and income stocks.

I've also done quite well with NKE, and the others you mentioned.

TJX, DG, ROST, UNH, SYK, LOW, TSCO, COR, AMT, MA, INTU, COST, AOS are a few more off the top of my head to look into.

The articles are getting a bit dated, but there are some links here to check out if you're interested in some names: http://dgiforthediy.com/high-growth-stocks/
Hormel Foods (NYSE: HRL) declares $0.21/share quarterly dividend, 12% increase from prior dividend of $0.1875.

https://seekingalpha.com/news/3411052-ho...1-dividend
L Brands with a 50% dividend cut.

After extensive review, the Board of Directors plans to reduce the company’s annual ordinary dividend to $1.20 from $2.40 currently, beginning with the quarterly dividend to be paid in March 2019.  The planned reduction will result in a dividend payout ratio that is more consistent with the company’s past practice, and a dividend yield in line with relevant comparisons.  The approximately $325 million in cash made available from the dividend reduction will be utilized primarily to contribute to the deleveraging of the company’s balance sheet over time. The Board was assisted in its assessment by its financial advisors BridgePark Advisors and PJT Partners.
Becton, Dickinson (NYSE:BDX) declares $0.77/share quarterly dividend, 2.7% increase from prior dividend of $0.75.

Forward yield 1.27%

Payable Dec. 31; for shareholders of record Dec. 10; ex-div Dec. 7.
McCormick (NYSE:MKC) declares $0.57/share quarterly dividend, 9.6% increase from prior dividend of $0.52.

Forward yield 1.55%

Payable Jan. 14; for shareholders of record Dec. 31; ex-div Dec. 28.
(11-27-2018, 05:48 PM)EricL Wrote: [ -> ]McCormick (NYSE:MKC) declares $0.57/share quarterly dividend, 9.6% increase from prior dividend of $0.52.

Forward yield 1.55%

Payable Jan. 14; for shareholders of record Dec. 31; ex-div Dec. 28.

Now there's a stock I want to own but never want to buy!
Same here. MKC is a well run company, but it always looks expensive and the sub CD rate Div % is very insufficient for my DGI tastes. 10% increases aren't getting it done from here.
I watched MKC for a few years before I bought too because it was always too expensive. Bought a small position in it and HRL on January 30 of this year when I liquidated my Dr Pepper position, and have done quite well with both. Have a 30% total return with HRL and 36% with MKC!
(11-28-2018, 11:24 AM)EricL Wrote: [ -> ]I watched MKC for a few years before I bought too because it was always too expensive. Bought a small position in it and HRL on January 30 of this year when I liquidated my Dr Pepper position, and have done quite well with both. Have a 30% total return with HRL and 36% with MKC!

Same here, watching MKC for years.  Never owned it, but have always thought it was a good company but too expensive.  I bought HRL a few years ago when I was deciding between the two.
I'm sure it looks a little different after you are already in a few years. It would look much different on a dip for a new purchase. The longest bull market ever has done this to quite a few aristocrats. High PE and low DIV. Not really the company's fault.