Why I Can't Stop Buying This 4%-Yielding Dividend ETF for Passive Income

Key Points

I love to collect passive income. I don't have to work for it, and it provides me with additional money to invest. Eventually, this strategy will allow me to retire and live off my passive income.

I invest in a variety of income-generating investments. One that I can't stop buying these days is the Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEMKT: SCHD) . This exchange-traded fund (ETF) currently has a 4% dividend yield, which is about triple the S&P 500 's dividend yield of around 1.3%. That enables me to generate more passive income from every dollar I invest. The fund also has an excellent record of increasing its payments. Because of that, it should provide me with lots of passive income in the future, which is why I just can't stop adding to my position.

Why I Can't Stop Buying This 4%-Yielding Dividend ETF for Passive Income

Holding top-quality dividend stocks

The Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF has a very simple strategy. The ETF aims to track the total return of the Dow Jones U.S. Dividend 100 Index . That underlying index screens stocks based on four dividend quality attributes:

The index uses these metrics to select the 100 best stocks based on their ability to pay sustainable, high-yielding dividends that should grow at above-average rates. It runs this screen once a year to reconstitute its holdings. It will remove lower-quality dividend stocks and replace them with companies offering higher-quality payouts.

At its last annual refresh in March, the 100 holdings had an average dividend yield of 3.8% and had grown their payouts at an average annual rate of 8.4% over the past five years. That provides investors with a nice blend of current income and growth potential.

Among the notable additions was oil giant ConocoPhillips (NYSE: COP) . It currently ranks as the sixth-largest holding of the Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF. The oil company has a 3.7% dividend yield. It has been growing its payout at a robust rate in recent years (34% in 2024, 14% in 2023, and 11% in 2022). ConocoPhillips aims to deliver dividend growth within the top 25% of companies in the S&P 500 in the future. It should have plenty of fuel to achieve that above-average growth rate. The oil company expects its investments in LNG and Alaska to drive $6 billion in incremental free cash flow over the next few years, putting it on track to deliver sector-leading growth through 2029.

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