Most investors read the yield column and move on. They see 2.5% and think, that’s not enough. They scroll past. What they never calculate is what that 2.5% yield becomes in fifteen years if the company raises its dividend every single year.
That number has a name. It’s called yield on cost. And it is one of the most powerful — and most ignored — concepts in long-term investing.
What Yield on Cost Actually Means
Here’s the mechanics. You buy a stock at $100 with a 2.5% dividend yield. That’s $2.50 per year. Not exciting. But if that company raises its dividend by 7% annually, your payout doubles in roughly ten years — not because the stock price moved, but because the underlying business kept growing and kept returning more cash to shareholders.
Even a modest annual increase in dividend growth compounds meaningfully over time. A stock yielding 2.5% today that raises its dividend by 7% each year can double its payout in the next ten years. After fifteen years at that rate, your yield on cost is approaching 7%. After twenty, it’s closer to 10%. You bought a 2.5% yield. You’re now collecting 10% on your original cost basis. Annually. Forever.
This is not a hypothetical. It is exactly what happened to investors who bought Coca-Cola in the early 1990s, or Procter & Gamble a decade before that.
The Companies That Make This Real
The framework only works with companies that can actually sustain and grow their payouts. That is where the research starts — and where most investors stop too early.
Procter & Gamble has raised its dividend for 69 consecutive years. Johnson & Johnson maintains a 63-year dividend growth streak. PepsiCo has delivered 53 consecutive years of dividend increases. These are not lucky outcomes. They are the product of businesses with pricing power, dominant market positions, and the free cash flow to sustain payouts through recessions, inflation cycles, and geopolitical shocks.
Slight tangent, but it matters: the companies with the longest dividend growth streaks also tend to share a structural trait that isn’t usually discussed alongside their payouts. They generate exceptionally high returns on invested capital.
ROIC Is the Engine
One of the most reliable ways to build long-term wealth is by owning companies that generate high returns on invested capital. These businesses allocate capital efficiently, earn strong profits relative to what they reinvest, and tend to compound value over time. High-ROIC companies often have durable competitive advantages that help them outperform across market cycles.
This matters for dividend investors because ROIC is ultimately what funds future dividend growth. A company that earns 30% on every dollar it reinvests has a completely different runway than one earning 8%. The high-ROIC business can afford to raise its dividend aggressively because the underlying engine keeps generating more cash than it needs to sustain operations.
Companies with high ROIC generate returns on capital in excess of the cost of capital. These returns indicate the company’s ability to sustain a competitive advantage. Take that out of the academic context and the message is simple: durable competitive advantage is what lets a company keep raising its dividend decade after decade without straining its balance sheet.
The Trap Most Investors Fall Into
Here is where most people get this backwards. They chase the highest current yield — the 7%, the 8%, sometimes the 10% payers. What they are usually buying is a business with a payout ratio so high there is no room left to grow the dividend. Or worse, a company borrowing to fund a dividend it cannot organically sustain.
A yield significantly higher than the S&P 500 average warrants careful scrutiny, as it could signal underlying financial issues or an unsustainable payout. The income looks attractive on day one. But five years in, the yield on cost has barely moved — and sometimes the dividend gets cut entirely.
The better question is not what is the yield today but what will this yield be in twelve years? That reframing changes almost every stock you evaluate.
The Reinvestment Multiplier
The mechanism accelerates when dividends are reinvested rather than collected as cash. The same $10,000 invested over 30 years at a 4% dividend yield ends at roughly $32,400 with reinvestment versus $22,000 if you take the cash — a 47% difference. That gap is purely the compounding effect of reinvested dividends purchasing additional shares, which then generate their own dividends, which purchase more shares.
Dividend reinvestment is one of the most powerful components of long-term investing. Instead of withdrawing dividend payments as cash, investors reinvest those payments to purchase additional shares. Over time, this process creates compounding growth because the investor begins earning dividends on previously reinvested dividends.
The math is not complicated. But the discipline required to sit on a 2.5% yield for ten years while more exciting things are happening elsewhere — that part is genuinely hard.
What You Should Actually Screen For
If you are building a long-term dividend portfolio, the metrics that actually predict future wealth creation are different from the ones that appear in most yield-focused screens. Look for payout ratios below 60% — that leaves room for growth. Prioritize companies with long histories of consecutive increases, not just current yield. Dig into ROIC figures going back at least five years. A business that has sustained ROIC above 15% for a decade is telling you something meaningful about its competitive position.
Sustaining high ROIC over a long period is rare, and it often points to strong competitive advantages and disciplined management. Companies that have consistently delivered 15% or more ROIC for over a decade stand out as proven value creators with durable business models.
One more thing. The psychological dimension is real. Receiving regular dividend payments can provide a powerful psychological boost, reinforcing the tangible benefits of long-term investing. It instills financial discipline, encouraging investors to focus on the underlying business health rather than short-term price fluctuations. The consistent income stream can also reduce anxiety during volatile market periods.
That is not a trivial benefit. Most investors underperform not because they pick the wrong stocks but because they abandon the right ones during drawdowns. A growing dividend check — arriving on schedule regardless of what the market is doing — is one of the more effective anchors against panic.
The investors who end up with the best outcomes are usually not the ones who found the highest yield. They are the ones who bought a reasonable yield from an exceptional business and then did almost nothing for twenty years.
That is the actual trade. It just doesn’t feel like one when you make it.
For informational purposes only.
