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3 Magnificent Stocks That Are Passive Income Machines

Keith Speights, David Jagielski, and Prosper Junior Bakiny, The Motley Fool

5 min read

In This Article:

  • Abbott Laboratories is a dividend stock you can buy and (almost) forget about.

  • AbbVie has proved its resilience by becoming stronger after losing patent exclusivity for its blockbuster drug Humira.

  • Johnson & Johnson is a seasoned dividend payer for all seasons.

  • 10 stocks we like better than AbbVie ›

Make money without even trying: That's what passive income is all about. But good investment alternatives are required to make this "easy" money.

Three Motley Fool contributors believe they have found some great dividend stocks that fit the bill. Here's why they think Abbott Laboratories (NYSE: ABT), AbbVie (NYSE: ABBV), and Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) are magnificent stocks that are passive income machines.

Passive income word cloud displayed on a tablet computer.

Image source: Getty Images.

David Jagielski (Abbott Laboratories): When picking a top dividend stock to hold in your portfolio, you want to consider a company that not only has a solid track record for making payouts but that also has solid fundamentals. The former helps demonstrate its commitment to rewarding shareholders, while the latter ensures that it has the capacity to continue doing so.

Abbott Laboratories has been paying a dividend going back more than 100 years, to 1924. And it has also been increasing its dividend annually for more than 50 consecutive years. Investors have become accustomed to not only receiving a dividend from this stock every quarter, but also seeing their dividend income rise over the years.

The diversified healthcare company currently pays its shareholders a quarterly dividend of $0.59, and that has risen by 146% over the past 10 years. That averages out to a compound annual growth rate of 9.4%. The stock's 1.8% dividend yield may look modest, but the likelihood of further rate hikes is why it can make for a great long-term buy.

What's also attractive about Abbott's business is that it has diverse operations, which makes it less dependent on any one particular business unit. It has segments related to nutrition, diagnostics, pharmaceuticals, and medical devices.

The company has generated stable and solid results, with its top line coming in at more than $40 billion in each of the past four years. And with strong free cash flow of $6.7 billion over the trailing 12 months (more than the $3.9 billion it paid out in dividends during that time frame), it's in an excellent position to continue growing its dividend for the foreseeable future.

Keith Speights (AbbVie): Abbott Labs spun off AbbVie as a separate entity in 2013. It inherited its parent company's outstanding track record of dividend increases and has kept the streak going. The big drugmaker has increased its dividend for an impressive 53 consecutive years.