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Just been thinking about dividend growth vs yield chasing, and honestly it's one of those things that separates long-term wealth builders from people hunting quick returns.
There's something elegant about watching a small dividend compound over decades. Start with a 0.77% yield today, but if it grows at 12% annually, you're looking at a 2.39% yield on your original cost in 10 years. That's not financial magic, that's just math working in your favor. By year 20, you could be pulling 7.43% from that same initial investment.
I've been looking at a couple of tech names that have this dividend growth story dialed in. Broadcom is sitting on a $73 billion backlog for AI chips and networking gear. That's not theoretical demand, that's actual orders. The company's pulling in $23 billion in trailing net income on $64 billion revenue, and they're only paying out about half their earnings as dividends. There's room to keep increasing that payout while still reinvesting in growth.
Microsoft's another one worth watching. They've been raising their dividend 10% annually for the past five years. Yeah, the yield looks small at 0.90%, but they're only paying out 22% of earnings. The enterprise software moat is real - 450 million commercial seats in Microsoft 365 isn't something that gets disrupted overnight. They just posted 17% revenue growth last quarter.
The thing about both these names is they're not fighting for survival. They're generating serious cash, taking care of shareholders, and still reinvesting heavily. That's the kind of profile that lets dividend growth compound over time.
If you're building a portfolio with a 20-30 year horizon, this compounding dividend story beats chasing 5% yields on shaky businesses. Worth digging into if you're thinking about passive income generation alongside growth.