What is a Dividend King?
A publicly-traded company that has raised its dividend for at least 50 consecutive years. Twice as strict as Dividend Aristocrat status (25 years) and a high bar that includes only the most durable cash generators.
Dividend Kings are companies with at least 50 consecutive years of dividend increases. The list includes roughly 50 names across consumer staples, industrials, utilities, and financials. A 50-year streak survives multiple recessions, oil crises, the 1970s inflation, the 2008 financial crisis, and the 2020 pandemic; only the most durable cash generators clear the bar. Examples: Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola, Johnson & Johnson, 3M, Lowe's, Colgate-Palmolive, Genuine Parts.
Why the streak matters
Raising the dividend through five decades and at least seven recessions requires (a) durable revenue through cycles, (b) operating margin resilience under cost pressure, (c) capital discipline (not over- expanding and breaking the dividend), and (d) management succession that maintains the priority. The streak is a composite signal of all four.
Most Dividend Kings overlap with the invest-like consensus screen on the Buffett-Fit and Smith-Fit frameworks. The screen and the dividend-king status are correlated because they reward similar characteristics (durable cash, conservative balance sheet, owner-friendly capital allocation).
Frequently asked questions
What is a Dividend King?
A company with at least 50 consecutive years of dividend increases. Roughly 50 names worldwide.
How is it different from Dividend Aristocrat?
Dividend Aristocrat requires 25 years; Dividend King requires 50. King is the stricter bar and includes only the most durable cash generators.
Are Kings safer than other stocks?
Lower-volatility on average but not risk-free. AT&T was a Dividend King before its 2022 dividend cut; status can be lost. The streak is backward-looking.
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