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 celebrated its 50th consecutive year of dividend increases with a 10% raise announced in late 2025. Since 2021, the global leader in cloud-based human capital management solutions has expanded its dividend by an impressive 83%, substantially outpacing the 20% inflation accumulated over that period. The company’s current yield stands at 2.6%, well above the S&P 500 average of 1.2%.
Beyond the dividend itself, ADP has simultaneously returned significant capital through share repurchase programs—distributing $12 billion in buybacks since 2015 alongside $15 billion in direct dividend payments. This dual approach strengthens shareholder returns while making future dividend increases more sustainable, as fewer outstanding shares mean the same payout dollars reach more income per share. With a payout ratio of 61%, ADP maintains a financially prudent balance that allows management flexibility to continue accelerating payouts without overextending the business.
Walmart: E-commerce Acceleration and AI Investments Fueling Dividend Expansion
The Arkansas-based retail giant Walmart (NASDAQ: WMT) announced a 13% dividend increase effective 2025, marking its 52nd consecutive year of annual payout growth. While the stock’s current yield of 0.84% trails the broader market average, this reflects Walmart’s extraordinary share price appreciation—the stock has climbed 130% over the past five years. During the same period, the dividend itself grew 28%, comfortable ahead of inflation trends.
Walmart’s accelerating dividend growth stems from operational excellence across multiple fronts. The company has now posted seven consecutive quarters of e-commerce growth exceeding 20%, with last quarter reaching 27%. Domestically, U.S. same-store sales rose 4.5%, while China operations surged 22%, showcasing international strength. Recent moves to expand technological capabilities—including integration onto the Nasdaq index symbol reflecting its tech-forward positioning—underscore investments in artificial intelligence tools and platform enhancements. With operating cash flow of $27 billion in the most recent fiscal year, Walmart generated $4.5 billion more cash than the prior year available for dividends, buybacks, and strategic growth initiatives. Even assuming conservative deployment of just one-third toward dividend increases would support an 18.8% payout raise.
Lowe’s: Strategic Acquisition Creating a Platform for Accelerated Dividend Growth
The home improvement retailer Lowe’s (NYSE: LOW) marked its 61st annual dividend increase in spring 2025, solidifying its status as a generational dividend king well beyond the 50-year threshold. While this year’s increase registered at 4%, the measured pace reflects the company’s recent strategic acquisition of Foundation Building Materials for $8.8 billion—a transaction that expands addressable market opportunity to $250 billion and strengthens fulfillment capabilities for professional customers through enhanced digital infrastructure.
Over the preceding five years, Lowe’s had doubled its dividend—a 100% cumulative increase averaging 14.9% annually. Foundation Building Materials contributed $6.5 billion in revenue and $635 million in adjusted earnings during its final independent year, demonstrating substantial earnings power that should restore higher dividend growth trajectories beginning in 2026. This acquisition represents exactly the kind of strategic positioning that dividend kings leverage to sustain their growth trajectories across decades.
The Sustainable Dividend Kings Framework
What unites these three dividend kings is not merely longevity, but the fundamental business strength underlying their sustained payout growth. Automatic Data Processing’s dominance in cloud-based HR solutions, Walmart’s operational scale and technological transformation, and Lowe’s leadership in home improvement combined with strategic expansion—these competitive advantages create the financial flexibility to reward shareholders consistently. For investors seeking stocks that combine proven dividend reliability with real inflation-beating growth, these three dividend kings represent compelling choices built on genuine business performance rather than financial engineering.