ETN

Dividend Growth Stocks: 26 Confident and Secure Companies Boosting Dividends

(via www.dividend-growth-stocks.com)

Dividend growth investing is a long-term strategy. A growing dividend is a sign that the company is becoming more valuable. Companies that consistently increase dividends tend to have steadily rising share prices and the best way to benefit from this is to buy and hold the stocks. Diversification and a focus on blue-chip stocks provides insurance for the few companies that don't pan out.

28 Dividend Stocks Acting Like a Money Machine | Dividends Value

(via dividendsvalue.com)

Readers of this space know that the primary focus of my investing efforts is to build an ever-increasing income income stream by investing in dividend growth securities. This means that often I will choose a lower yielding security with better dividend growth prospects over a higher yielding security. As one that values diversity, I also invest in some high yield securities.

General Electric (GE) raises dividend; 15 other companies follow suit

(via www.dividendgrowthinvestor.com)

Almost one and half years after the dividend was cut, the company raised its quarterly dividend 20% to 12 cents/share on Friday. The news sent the stock over 3% higher for the day. Whether the company can rebuild its streak of consecutive dividend increases remains to be seen however.

15 Dividend Stocks Defending Shareholder Returns

(via dividendsvalue.com)

Dividend stocks are sometimes referred to as defensive stocks since many investors flee to them in an economic downturn. Their dividends, if sustainable, provide a minimum level of positive return. This cushions the downward pressure from the market. Better yet, great dividend companies not only sustain their dividends in a downturn – they actually raise them.

Eaton Eats It

(via waxink.blogspot.com)

We noticed a news report last month that mentioned Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. (NYSE: BRK-A) had sold its 2 million share stake in Eaton Corporation, (NYSE: ETN), a move that admittedly struck us as odd since every website that can spell Warren Buffett says he holds stocks for perpetuity.