Five Tech Investments at the Forefront of the Silicon Valley Dividend Revolution

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There are thousands of ways to make money in the stock market, and to a newcomer, they can be overwhelming.

A quick Google search will yield you millions of hits on “what stocks to buy,” “how to invest,” or “first time investor tips.” While there’s some good advice out there, there’s also plenty of scam artists looking to “mentor” newbies… for thousands of dollars, of course.

As someone who’s been in the markets for years, none of these tips, tricks, and strategies will work if they lack one thing: Growth.

The fact of the matter is, if you don’t put your money into a company that’s going to grow, you’re not going to get any results. That’s simply not how it works.

Now, it can be scary putting your hard-earned money into the market, especially the one we’re seeing today. The coronavirus pandemic wreaked havoc on the markets, and even the best traders got taken to the cleaners and lost a pretty penny.

I feel the angst sometimes, just as I’m sure you have.

Even as we start to rally away from coronavirus lows, we’re seeing how the system is rigged against us. Wall Street computerization, rapidly growing leverage, and more money in volatility-creating ETFs than ever before, it’s more difficult than ever to find steady, stable, cold-hard cash.

And, no, not a new, fancy-pants, “nice to have” widget. We’ve seen where focusing on that kind of stuff lands us with companies like Peloton Interactive Inc. (NasdaqGS:PTON) or Uber Technologies Inc. (NYSE:UBER).

The name of this game is income. We’re seeing a pronounced shift to true dividend payers in Silicon Valley.

This was a territory once claimed by huge utility or consumer discretionary companies – those like American Water Works Company Inc. (NYSE:AWK) or The Procter & Gamble Co. (NYSE:PG), for example.

But, now, tech’s joined the crowd – and this could mean steady income AND huge capital appreciation.

The “New Silicon Valley”

High-tech firms are now becoming some of the best dividend stocks to own, even as they retain explosive growth potential. These high flyers have built up troves of cash since the end of the Global Financial Crisis, and they’re facing pressure from activist investors to spend it.

Many of these firms have profit margins well over 20%. Cash stored overseas – several hundred billion worth – is flowing back into home coffers, thanks to President Donald Trump’s $1.5 trillion in tax cuts for corporations.

And it might not surprise you to learn that the best tech firms shelling out dividends are on the road to becoming what I call Silicon Valley Aristocrats. A “dividend aristocrat,” of course, is a company that has increased its dividend at least annually for 25 consecutive years.

Just imagine what’s required for a firm to prosper and pay back its shareholders year after year, through sector volatility, broader recessions, occasional wars, and challenging political upheavals. Persevering through all of that volatility and managing to increase dividends despite it all is no small feat.

Tech stocks generally outpace the overall stock market. The Nasdaq Composite is up 131.40% over the past five years – compared to just 51.24% growth in the S&P 500 and 42.72% growth in the Dow over the same time frame. That means you’re getting significant share-price appreciation along with your cash with Silicon Valley’s best dividend payers.

With March 2020 lows, individual tech stocks lost between 15 to 20%, but the Nasdaq, Dow Jones, and S&P 500 lost 19%, 27%, and 34% respectively. I know where I’d rather put my money in a bear market, should we see one.

So seeing these tech firms enter the dividend aristocrat family is great news for investors like you. Not least of all because prime dividend-paying stocks tend to hold up better during times of low growth or stock-market volatility – and that cash can serve as a cushion when stock markets are volatile.

Even if the markets do have an inherently upward bias, the rapidly increasing computerization I was just talking about will make sure that the moves aren’t as… smooth… as you and I would like.

Now, as we look at some of these Silicon Valley Aristocrats, it’ll pay to keep some key factors in mind.

For starters, it’s important to clear up one misconception many investors have about tech stocks. They often think revenue growth and share-price appreciation are the only factors worth considering.

But, as important as growth is, if you ignore dividends and the cash they create, you’re missing an important part of what’s happening with tech today. Because they have so much cash on hand, they’re now linking their growth to shareholder payouts.

Tech companies were among the sectors that paid more in dividends among S&P 500 companies in recent years. In fact, in the past decade, tech firms grew their dividends by about 17% to $88 billion.

Now, tech firms in the S&P paid an average 1.8% yield, lower than the average 3.2% yield overall.

But here’s the thing that Wall Street won’t tell you…

When you see that the right company that “only” yields one or two percentage points, don’t worry a bit about that rate. Instead, pay attention to whether the company has been increasing whatever amount you’re looking at year after year, through changing markets and business challenges…

Until you’re ready to start collecting the cash.

Even for younger investors, it pays to add budding Silicon Valley Aristocrats to your core long-term holdings, because the compounding over time can be huge. Dividends that are growing by 7% a year, for example, will double in a decade.

To get started, let’s take a look at five fast-growing tech plays with accelerating dividends.

Silicon Valley Aristocrat No. 1 – $1 Trillion – and Still Growing

You can’t put together a list of great dividend-paying tech companies without including the biggest market-cap stock of all time.

Apple Inc.

NasdaqGS: AAPL

Dividend Yield: 0.71%

Annualized Payout: $0.88

Dividend Growth: Six Years

Share Price: $124.58

Market Cap: $2.1T

Yes, Apple Inc. (NasdaqGS:AAPL) has come under pressure recently because of its pronounced shift “beyond the iPhone” and into its services segment for real profits. Even if I think that shift could be more lucrative ever and we’re even seeing signs of it now – with the move into medical devices and the joint credit card its creating with The Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (NYSE:GS) – Apple remains a cash machine with $69 billion on hand and a steady dividend.

Truth be told, Apple has become one of the more shareholder-friendly firms around – in tech or any other sector.

Since 2015, it has spent at least $52.75 billion on dividends.

Of course, when you post the kind of numbers Apple did in its most recent quarter, you have the kind of cash flow that mints money for shareholders.

Q4/2019 results, announced on October 30, was the eleventh-straight quarter of rising revenue, which came in at $64 billion.

Even better for the long haul, Apple keeps ramping up its services. The company has suggested that it may be able to generate as much as $50 billion for that segment by 2020.

It’s well on the way to doing so. The services have become one of Apple’s biggest growth engines based on demand for subscriptions to iCloud storage, the streaming-music service, and offerings such as Netflix and HBO through iTunes and Apple TV.

Service sales in the quarter hit an all-time high of $13 billion, a yearly increase of 18%. That means two things…

  1. Services are already on pace to hit $40 billion in sales as early as the end of next year.
  2. Apple is well on its way to becoming the kind of software firm that can move well beyond its iPhone/Mac hardware legacy.

Now, Apple’s dividend is relatively new. So, we don’t have the kind of long-term growth we’ve seen from the other four firms. However, it’s still growing at 33.8% – so that’s why it’s made my list.

That’s a very good number, and it’s a strong bet that Apple can keep that kind of growth going for a long time, practically no matter what the Fed does, what happens in the White House, or what happens in the murky geopolitical sphere.

I name even more all-weather stocks in my first ever stock-picking lightning round event. I cover over 30 stocks – 23 potential gold mines and 12 that you shouldn’t touch with a 10-foot pole. Click here to start watching.

Silicon Valley Aristocrat No. 2 – The Dividend Veteran

Analog Devices Inc.

NasdaqGS: ADI

Dividend Yield: 1.86%

Annualized Payout: $2.76

Dividend Growth: Nine Years

Share Price: $148.88

Market Cap: $54.9B

Over the past 50 years, it’s racked up an incredible 4,700 patents for its analog and mixed-signal semiconductors.

It also has an amazing 125,000 global clients.

I’m talking about Analog Devices Inc. (NasdaqGS:ADI), a leading maker of chips and sensors and a venture that has a long record of innovation.

Just look at what the company is doing with BlackBox Biometrics Inc.

We’ve all seen the heightened attention being paid to brain injuries – particularly concussions. From high-school lacrosse players to NFL quarterbacks, scientists and doctors are studying brain injuries like never before. BlackBox makes sensor systems that can measure the concussive forces that cause traumatic brain injuries in soldiers or professional athletes.

Both its Linx Impact Assessment System and Blast Gauge System use ADI’s microelectromechanical system (MEMS) inertial sensors. MEMS are specialized sensors that integrate circuits and sensors on a tiny microchip with a built-in central processor. These sensors can collect and measure data relating to sound, motion, force, humidity, temperature, pressure, and axis of rotation.

And then there’s Analog Device’s breakthrough in drones. It helped drone leader DJI make aerial-camera drones that can send back real-time video – even when flying through the most rugged, remote environments on Earth.

First responders use drones to monitor natural disasters. The military uses them to watch and attack enemy combatants. DJI’s drones rely on Analog’s MEMS gyroscopes and accelerometers to stay in the air.

Gyroscopes allow our mobile devices to be maneuvered in every conceivable way – while keeping the viewing screen level. Accelerators track speed, gravity, tilt angle, incline, rotation, and vibration. As it turns out, what’s good for smartphones is good for drones.

And for ADI.

Analog Devices is the world leader in the analog-, mixed-, and digital-signal processing integrated circuits (ICs) used in just about any type of electronic equipment you can think of.

Virtually every wireless call, text, picture, or download today passes through one of the firm’s chips.

ADI now boasts more than 2,200 patents, with 800 more pending, which gives the firm valuable assets – while also creating a hefty “barrier to entry” for would-be market entrants.

Analog Devices serves more than 100,000 customers in the automotive, aerospace, communications, defense, energy, healthcare, and industrial markets.

In communications, ADI makes radio-frequency ICs, data converters, amplifiers, and the clocks and power devices in communications systems.

And it’s the authority on signal processing for wireless-network gear. CEO Vincent Roche believes the number of 4G subscribers and the bandwidth used per subscriber will double his firm’s sales in communications infrastructure to roughly $4 billion by the end of 2020.

There’s also industrial automation, which accounts for 47% of revenue. Its technology can be found in field instruments, motor controls, and robotics.

And that bodes well for long-term growth.

ADI knocked the leather off the ball on its Q3/2019 earnings report – and showed continuing growth. The company beat analysts’ expectations on adjusted actual EPS by $0.04, and that represented its 20th consecutive quarter of beats.

What’s even more, the company has grown its gross quarterly revenue 97.89% over the past three years, which has led to an extraordinary spike in gross quarterly profits of 103.5% – to $1.04 billion.

And, to me, this is a true Silicon Valley Aristocrat.

With 15 consecutive years of annual dividend increases, its record is more than respectable. It’s commendable.

Its yield is a nice 1.86% – and it’s growing that rapidly, with a five-year dividend growth rate of 45.95%.

With all this in place, we should be seeing share-price and dividend appreciation on Analog for decades to come.

Silicon Valley Aristocrat No. 3 – The Quiet Tech Leader

International Business Machines Corp.

NasdaqGS: IBM

Dividend Yield: 4.58%

Annualized Payout: $6.55

Dividend Growth: 20 Years

Share Price: $143.04

Market Cap: $127.9B

With 109 years in business and operations spanning across over 170 countries, IBM is far cry from a small tech company. In this case, that works in our favor.

International Business Machines Corp. (NasdaqGS:IBM) has been a tech leader for years. The company produces and develops hardware, software, and middleware for everything from computers to nanotechnology.

But the tech leader goes far beyond just developing and refining existing technology. For 27 consecutive years (and counting), IBM has set the record for holding the most patents for any U.S. businesses.

IBM’s inventions include everyday items like the automated teller machine (ATMs), the floppy disk, the hard drive, dynamic random access memory (DRAM), and the magnetic stripe credit card. The IBM mainframe, one of their older patents, was the main computing device used between the 1960s and 1970s.

IBM may not be as well-known as “tech giants” like Apple and Microsoft, but that doesn’t mean they company isn’t a fierce contender. Currently, IBM is working on the first quantum computer in Germany, which will comply with the EU’s strict codes on data sovereignty. This comes almost a year after the launch of their first commercial quantum computer, IBM Q System One, early last year.

The company is constantly looking to move with the times, particularly in areas where the market’s buying power has moved into.

Which brings me to the cloud. IBM has already taken the lead in the world of cloud-computing, a a$1.2 trillion industry. The company took over RedHat Inc. In 2018, compounding their cloud-computing abilities, and shortly after rolled out the Hybrid cloud, which would allow users to access their programs whenever and wherever, using a public cloud, a private cloud, or even an on-premise system.

IBM claims their approach to the cloud really unleashes the full extent of cloud-computing capabilities, and I’d be wary to disagree. In 2019, 2,000+ clients took advantage of IBM’s software, and IBM made $21.2 billion in 2019 on their cloud computing technology, alone. This sizeable chunk of revenue made up 27.5% of IBM’s revenue that year.

IBM’s dedication to pushing the boundaries of technology and supercomputing further in the past several decades has shown up in their financials, year over year. The company has seen steady growth in their net income recently, tacking on 63.93% in the past three years.

It’s the company’s forward-looking perspective that I really like though. IBM is looking far beyond the technology sector when it comes to growing their margins. They’ve targeted airlines to provide cloud services to assist with rebooking, update their customer service, and help empower employees give higher levels of service. Their technology doesn’t end when the plane takes off; the cloud can also help predict levels of turbulence ahead of time so the pilot and crew can optimize trips and plan their routes accordingly.

The company has also issued statements announcing their move into digitalized banking. When the banking sector moved largely online, global banks like BNP Paribas realized that their need for top-tier security and global access to an extensive client base couldn’t be met with their existing private cloud. Working with IBM, they’ve created a robust and secure public cloud for clients to access whenever they needed.

Those are just a few examples of the way IBM is expanding. They’re embarking into AI, which will, once again, allow the company to cross industries with new technology. To date, IBM has patented over 1,800 new AI-based technologies that can help businesses grow, energy become more efficient, and supply chains become shorter.

IBM has moved far past the traditional “technology company” outlook, and their services are becoming revolutionary.

Its yield is an absolutely showstopping 5.05% – and it’s growing that rapidly, with a five-year dividend growth rate of 51.29%.

Silicon Valley Aristocrat No. 4 – The Dividend Aristocrat

Cisco Systems Inc.

NasdaqGS: CSCO

Dividend Yield: 2.82%

Annualized Payout: $1.48

Dividend Growth: Nine Years

Share Price: $52.54

Market Cap: $222.0B

Cisco Systems Inc. (NasdaqGS:CSCO) is an American multinational technology conglomerate headquartered in. San Jose, California. This tech company manufactures, sells, and develops hardware, software, and telecommunication devices, as well as offering other tech-related products and services. These services include everything from cybersecurity to Internet of Things (IoT) and partnerships.

Established in 1984, the company now includes a global market, over 50 subsidiaries, and nearly 76,000 employees. This company knows growth, and they know it well.

The numbers say it all. From 2017 to 2019, overall revenue has grown from $48 billion to $51 billion, a 6.25% increase in only three years. While product revenue grew marginally in this time period, from $12.3 billion to $12.9 billion, or 4.86%, service revenue soared 9.24%, jumping from $35.7 billion to $39.0 billion.

That’s the sector I want to focus on: services.

Technology has been a goldmine since the beginning of the industrial revolution, we’ve seen that first hand, especially in the past few years. Every new smartphone, tablet, computer has a. new upgrade or better, smarter, faster sibling hit the market only months later.

Whether it’s a competitor’s product or just a newer product from the same company, it’s becoming clear that the consumer can’t keep up. How many different series of iPhones sit around your conference room, or better yet your dinner table?

No, the new moneymaker play is in the service sector. Apple threw the glove into the ring with this one when they pulled iPhone sales at the beginning of last year. They were taunting the change and leading the movement: it’s well beyond smartdevices now. Now, it’s about what can you offer, after we buy?

Cisco answered: honey, we got it all!

And they do. From cloud services to IT services and everything in between, Cisco proves that you can make money after the final sale.

Every IT product CSCO sells comes with the option to upgrade to “high value service” which offers product support from a Cisco team member in 40% less times, 70% fewer outages, and decreases risk of a security breach by 65%.

They also offer “business critical solutions” which help optimize the workforce and cut out waste. According to their website, businesses spend 70% on running a business, leaving only 30% to be spent on innovation. With their business critical services, they knock off 21% of operating expenses and an incredible 74% of downtown.

These nicely packaged services come with all of the perks of any other tech company… i.e. the software and hardware that keeps any business running smoothly.

Its yield is a solid 2.82% – and it’s growing steadily, although a little slower, with a five-year dividend growth rate of 14.20%.

Silicon Valley Aristocrat No. 5 – This One Covers the Waterfront

First Trust NASDAQ Technology Dividend Index Fund

NasdaqGM: TDIV

Dividend Yield: 2.13%

Annualized Payout: $1.15

Net Asset Value: $54.11

Total Assets: $1.5B

The First Trust NASDAQ Technology Dividend Index Fund (NYSE:TDIV) is a great way to receive significant dividend payments with a single investment that offers broad diversification.

This exchange-traded fund (ETF) is entirely composed of technology and telecom firms. Specifically, semiconductor firms make up 29% of the fund, software firms 14.3%, hardware and storage 13.2%, and telecom firms 12.4%.

TDIV has $1.04 billion in total net assets spread among 92 top tech dividend payers. To be included, a stock must have a market cap of more than $500 million and have paid a dividend in the past 12 months.

Apple Inc. (NasdaqGS: AAPL) is TDIV’s No. 1 holding, accounting for 9.35% of the fund. Intel Corp. (NasdaqGS:INTC) and Microsoft Corp. (NasdaqGS:MSFT) come in at No. 2 and No. 3, and each makes up about 8.93% AND 7.88% of the fund respectively. Cisco Systems Inc. Corp. (NasdaqGS:CSCO) and IBM Corp. (NYSE:IBM) come in at No. 4 and No. 5, and they make up about 7.5% each.

Besides these mega-caps, TDIV also holds a number of smaller firms, including Western Digital Corp. (NasdaqGS:WDC), Intuit Inc. (NasdaqGS:INTU), Garmin Ltd. (NasdaqGS:GRMN), and Corning Inc. (NYSE:GLW).

The 30-day SEC yield of this ETF is an exceptional 2.13%, and income is paid quarterly to shareholders. In addition, the annual expense ratio of TDIV is at a modest 0.5%, or $50 for every $10,000 invested.

On Your Way to Becoming a Silicon Valley Millionaire

The bottom line here is that these Silicon Valley Aristocrats give us two areas of growth in a single stock: cash income and share-price appreciation.

Tech is the most dynamic sector in the marketplace today. And despite what the “big thinkers” on Wall Street would have you believe, the tech revolution is closer to its beginning than its end.

These great plays will be there, year in and year out, driving innovation forward.

Plus, their dividends mean they’ll be home to the easiest money you make in stocks. And if you reinvest the dividends, you can grow your portfolio through the “magic” of compounding.

Consider this: From 1940 through 2011, dividends and dividend reinvestments accounted for more than 90% of the S&P 500’s total return during that time.

Therefore, $100 invested in the S&P 500 at the end of 1940 would have been worth approximately $174,000 at the end of 2011 – assuming that all dividends were reinvested. If dividends were not included, the investment would only be worth $12,000.

These are three opportunities in fast-growing industries that pay you above-average income.

Get started on your Silicon Valley Millionaire Plan now.

Five More Tech Juggernauts – These Ones Are Entering “Hyperdrive”

I’ve just given my subscribers the names of five technology stocks that I believe will cause a $353 billion ripple in the next 18 months.

It’s going to be so big that it will forever alter American life.

And I’m going to give you three reasons why each stock is a total BUY right here.