Dividend-paying companies are an oasis in the desert of underperforming stocks. They offer solid payouts today and the promise of capital gains tomorrow. According to a study by Ibbotson, reinvested dividends made up about 40% of total stock returns from 1926 to 2006. In fact, dividend investing is so appealing that superinvestor Warren Buffett has made it a significant component of his portfolio.

When searching for great dividend stocks, it makes a lot of sense to start with companies that have been playing the dividend game the longest. Standard & Poor's has culled the dividend winners from the also-rans in a list it calls the "dividend aristocrats."

Let's examine the top dividend aristocrats by yield in the Capital Goods industry. For context, I've also included their five-year annualized dividend growth rate.

Company

Trailing Yield

5-Yr Dividend Growth Rate

3M (NYSE: MMM)

2.4%

5.2%

Dover (NYSE: DOV)

1.9%

10.2%

Emerson Electric (NYSE: EMR)

2.3%

10.1%

W.W. Grainger (NYSE: GWW)

1.6%

17.8%


Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's.

These aren't formal recommendations -- just ideas for your own further research. Still, they could give you a great start toward find companies capable of paying rising dividends for a quarter-century or more. S&P just announced its dividend aristocrats for 2011, and you can see the top yielders here.

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