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Key Takeaways
- The dividend aristocrats, a subset of dividend-paying S&P 500 stocks, have outperformed the broader index in 2026.
- Rising geopolitical tensions and worries about AI-driven disruption have pushed many investors into stocks perceived as safer plays to start this year.
Are dividend stocks back in vogue?
They seem to be having a moment. As geopolitical tensions and worries about AI-driven disruption have rattled markets to start the year, many investors are piling into stocks perceived as safer, AI-proof plays. That includes stocks that pay dividends.
The dividend aristocrats, a subset of S&P 500 companies that have raised their dividends annually for at least 25 years in a row, have outperformed the broader index in 2026. Their roughly 7% total return, which includes dividends, compares to the benchmark index’s about flat performance.
Why This Matters to Investors
The dividend aristocrats, a group of large, established companies, may be more attractive to investors when markets are volatile for their perceived quality and reliability.
The dividend aristocrats haven’t always outperformed the benchmark index. Last year, the group registered a total return of about 7%, compared to the S&P 500’s 18%. However, the dividend aristocrats retain a reputation for helping investors better weather periods of heightened market volatility, when sentiment becomes risk-off.
Analysts at Wolfe Research called the group their “favorite dividend strategy in periods of market turmoil” in a recent note to clients. “This cohort of stocks has generally outperformed throughout the market cycle—especially into and throughout economic downturns,” they wrote, making them a “good place to ‘hide.'”
There are 69 companies among the dividend aristocrats. Many of them are household names like retail heavyweight Walmart (WMT), fast-food giant McDonald’s (MCD), and maker of household cleaning products Clorox (CLX). All three of those stocks have substantially outperformed the S&P 500 in recent weeks.
Read Investopedia’s full list of the index’s constituents here and today’s live markets coverage here.

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