Dividend Stocks — Analysis & Key Financial Data
Dividend investing focuses on companies that return cash to shareholders through regular dividends. Investors use dividend strategies for income, potential inflation protection, and the discipline that payout policies can impose on management, often favouring mature, cash-generating businesses with sustainable yields. Invest Viable screens for dividend stocks using transparent criteria. The exact rule for this page: dividend yield of at least 2% and positive earnings (trailing P/E greater than zero). This keeps the list focused on names that both pay a meaningful yield and are profitable. Our Investment Score and base valuations help you assess quality and valuation alongside income. These criteria are screening filters only. They do not rank stocks by “best” or constitute investment advice. We show stocks that match the rule so you can research and decide what’s interesting.
- Stocks passing screen
- 913
- Latest data
- 2026-06-28
Highest Investment Scores in Dividend Stocks
Top-rated stocks by Investment Score
- Price
- $91.19
- Fair Value
- $355.29
- Market Cap
- $21.2B
- Margin
- +289.6%
- Price
- $37.60
- Fair Value
- $281.18
- Market Cap
- $1.4B
- Margin
- +647.8%
- Price
- $15.21
- Fair Value
- $325.28
- Market Cap
- $9.8B
- Margin
- +2038.6%
- Price
- $33.94
- Fair Value
- $131.78
- Market Cap
- $3.3B
- Margin
- +288.3%
Dividend Stock List
| Company | Price | Fair Value | Score | Market Cap | P/E | EPS | Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Expand Energy Corporation EXE | $91.19 | $355.29 | 100 | $21.2B | 6.5 | $13.45 | 2.96% |
Global Ship Lease, Inc. GSL | $37.60 | $281.18 | 97 | $1.4B | 3.6 | $10.75 | 6.35% |
Piper Sandler Companies PIPR | $72.34 | $69.18 | 97 | $5.1B | 18.2 | $4.15 | 2.59% |
Barrick Mining Corporation B | $36.73 | $53.93 | 97 | $62.5B | 10.3 | $3.64 | 2.39% |
Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited HMY | $15.21 | $325.28 | 97 | $9.8B | 10.0 | $26.08 | 2.65% |
Hamilton Insurance Group, Ltd. HG | $33.94 | $131.78 | 97 | $3.3B | 5.3 | $6.20 | 5.96% |
The Progressive Corporation PGR | $218.45 | $249.54 | 94 | $131.1B | 11.4 | $19.74 | 6.20% |
AngloGold Ashanti plc AU | $80.89 | $65.72 | 94 | $41.3B | 11.9 | $6.88 | 5.64% |
Hamilton Lane Incorporated HLNE | $78.83 | $118.11 | 94 | $4.3B | 13.0 | $5.97 | 2.85% |
The Marzetti Company MZTI | $114.16 | $131.64 | 94 | $3.2B | 18.1 | $6.43 | 3.41% |
Euroseas Ltd. ESEA | $66.37 | — | 94 | $468M | 3.5 | $19.04 | 4.45% |
SuRo Capital Corp. SSSS | $12.54 | $24.13 | 94 | $309M | 1.4 | $8.09 | 4.22% |
The Bank of N.T. Butterfield & Son Limited NTB | $59.50 | $133.01 | 94 | $2.4B | 10.2 | $6.04 | 3.31% |
BW LPG Limited BWLP | $17.43 | $70.75 | 94 | $2.6B | 7.3 | $2.39 | 10.63% |
Canadian Natural Resources Limited CNQ | $39.50 | $121.37 | 94 | $82.4B | 12.0 | $4.66 | 4.33% |
Inter Parfums, Inc. IPAR | $111.86 | $163.02 | 90 | $3.5B | 20.4 | $5.28 | 2.96% |
Genpact Limited G | $27.50 | $65.16 | 90 | $4.8B | 8.7 | $3.34 | 2.51% |
Moelis & Company MC | $65.42 | $65.45 | 90 | $4.8B | 21.9 | $2.93 | 4.03% |
Cal-Maine Foods, Inc. CALM | $80.56 | $215.96 | 90 | $3.8B | 5.6 | $14.69 | 6.00% |
MarketAxess Holdings Inc. MKTX | $113.49 | $125.30 | 90 | $4.0B | 13.3 | $8.77 | 2.74% |
Korn Ferry KFY | $66.58 | $122.72 | 90 | $3.6B | 13.5 | $5.45 | 2.76% |
LifeVantage Corporation LFVN | $6.24 | $3.90 | 90 | $84M | 14.3 | $0.46 | 2.79% |
Opera Limited OPRA | $19.83 | $21.35 | 90 | $1.7B | 14.7 | $1.27 | 4.24% |
Global Industrial Co GIC | $33.46 | $40.24 | 90 | $1.3B | 18.2 | $1.97 | 3.07% |
Accenture plc ACN | $124.44 | $293.55 | 90 | $78.9B | 10.2 | $12.78 | 4.94% |
About dividend-style screening
Dividend investing covers a wide spectrum of approaches — from low-yield growth-dividend programmes carried by businesses reinvesting most of their cash into expansion, through to high-yield income strategies focused on present cash distribution at the expense of growth. The screen on this page sits in the middle of that spectrum: a 2% yield floor selects names with meaningful current income relative to the broad market while staying below the 5% High-Yield threshold, and a positive-P/E filter excludes companies whose dividends sit on a structurally weaker coverage base.
Two practical realities shape the resulting list. The first is sector tilt. Utilities, Real Estate, mature Financials, Consumer Staples, and parts of Energy structurally produce more dividend payers than Technology or Communication Services, so the screen leans defensive on average. The second is the gap between yield and durability. A 2% yield is more durable than a 6% yield in most cases because the higher number often signals market concern about coverage; the screener surfaces yield, Investment Score, and base valuation together so the picture isn't reduced to one number.
What this page is for
This page is a screener and reference surface, not editorial coverage. The list above refreshes with each data update; the methodology, FAQ, and related categories below stay in place so the page is useful both for somebody arriving from a specific search and for somebody scanning dividend-style names for the first time.
If you want to value a single stock end-to-end with adjustable assumptions rather than scan the screen, the Invest Viable Valuator walks through the same models we use to compute the base valuations on this page.
How we screen for dividend stocks
A stock passes the dividend screen when its trailing dividend yield is at least 2% and its price-to-earnings ratio is positive. The P/E condition excludes loss-making companies whose dividends sit on a more fragile coverage base.
Yield >= 2% AND P/E > 0
- The 2% yield floor is set above the typical broad-market average to surface meaningful income, while staying below the 5% threshold of the High-Yield Stocks page (which captures the more concentrated yield-driven cohort).
- The P/E > 0 condition excludes companies with negative trailing earnings. A negative P/E means the company is loss-making on a trailing basis, which is a structural concern for dividend coverage that the screen removes by construction.
- The screen does not require dividend growth, payout-coverage analysis, or sector context — those are separate questions the page surfaces alongside the screen.
Frequently asked questions
What does "dividend style" mean on Invest Viable?
A two-condition screen — trailing dividend yield of at least 2% AND positive trailing earnings (P/E > 0). The yield floor selects names with meaningful income relative to the broad market average; the P/E condition excludes companies whose dividends sit on a loss-making earnings base. The combination surfaces a more durable cohort of dividend names than a yield-only screen.
How is dividend style different from the High-Yield Stocks page?
High-Yield is single-factor at a higher threshold (Yield ≥ 5%) with no earnings filter. Dividend style is two-factor at a lower yield threshold (Yield ≥ 2%) with a positive-earnings filter. Many income-oriented investors look at both — High-Yield for higher current income from a smaller cohort, Dividend style for a broader and more conservative payer set.
Why exclude negative-earnings stocks?
A company with negative trailing earnings is paying its dividend out of cash reserves, debt, or asset sales rather than recurring profitability. Such payments may continue but they don't have the structural durability of payments funded from ongoing earnings. The P/E filter removes them by construction.
Are all dividend-style stocks defensive?
Most are, because the yield floor naturally tilts toward Utilities, Real Estate, mature Financials, Consumer Staples, and Energy. But individual names within these sectors can still be cyclical or carry significant business risk. The screener surfaces the supporting financials so each name can be evaluated on its own merits.
Does Invest Viable recommend specific dividend stocks?
No. This page is a screener and analysis surface, not a recommendation list. Each stock is shown with its underlying financial data, base valuation, and Investment Score so you can do your own research. Invest Viable does not publish buy or sell calls on individual securities.