The average Canadian could need an income raise for 2023 following a record inflation bout that eroded the purchasing power of their income streams during the past two years. Dividend stock investors welcomed the timely “inflation-beating” dividend raises on three dividend aristocrats the market has fallen in love with over the past decade. They paid more cash into investors’ pockets, reducing the need to sell stocks at a discount to cover living expenses.
Let’s have a look at how each of the dividend stocks came to investors’ rescue, and why you need them in a passive income portfolio.
TD Bank
The Toronto-Dominion Bank (TSX:TD
TD Bank raised its quarterly dividend by 12.7% for 2022, and by another 7.9% for 2023, cushioning investors against 4.8% inflation in 2021, and a 6.3% inflation rate in 2022. You can buy more with the cash dividends from TD this year than you could a year ago.
The current quarterly dividend on TD stock yields a respectable 4.7% annually. The bank paid out just 49% of its earnings as dividends over the past 12 months. Its dividends are well covered by earnings, and free cash flow.
What’s more, TD Bank has ample capital after abandoning a planned acquisition of First Horizon this year. The bank may choose to reinvest the capital in a new target, underwrite more businesses, or return the excess capital to shareholders through share repurchases and dividend raises.
TD has an approved share buyback plan to repurchase up to 30 million shares over the next 12 months. Although the bank needs a strong North American economy to earn more money for its investors, TD stock’s dividend has survived all recent economic recessions.
Canadian Natural Resources
Commodity prices may be inherently volatile, but Canadian Natural Resources (TSX:CNQ
Thanks to its low-decline assets and industry-leading low breakeven points, Canadian Natural Resources is generating record cash flows as benchmark crude oil prices oscillate around the US$70 per barrel mark on the West Texas Intermediate (WTI). The company generated $3.4 billion in adjusted funds flow during the first quarter. It returned $2.8 billion to shareholders through share repurchases and dividends during the first four months of 2023.
CNQ recently raised its dividends by 5.8% in March, and committed to returning 100% of free cash flow to shareholders when net debt reaches $10 billion. The policy should mean higher dividend raises ahead, as long as oil prices comply. Net debt dropped to $11.9 billion by March 31, 2023.
Most noteworthy, the company historically raised dividends during three recent economic recessions, another reason why Canadian investors love CNQ stock. It’s an oil giant that takes good care of income-oriented investors who value cash dividends.
Manulife Financial
Financial sector stocks are generally a good place to find value stocks that pay lovely cash dividends. Manulife Financial (TSX:MFC
Manulife recently raised its cash dividend by 10.6% for 2023, following a 17.9% dividend raise for 2022 – far above record inflation rates experienced during the past year. The current MFC stock dividend yields a juicy 5.9% annually.
The business remains profitable. Manulife reported core earnings of $1.5 billion for the first quarter of 2023, up 6% on a constant currency basis from a comparable period last year. Earnings remain strong despite market volatility. Manulife’s diversified business footprint taps into a resilient North American insurance market and saw encouraging sales growth momentum in Asia.
Financial analysts forecast a respectable 7.4% annual growth rate in Manulife’s earnings per share over the next five years. Growing earnings should sustain respectable dividend growth rates during the period.
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