Dividend Stocks (Broad) — Analysis & Key Financial Data
Dividend Stocks (Broad) group companies based on shared financial characteristics — for example by market-cap bucket, dividend yield, valuation, or composite Investment Score. Many investors use these attribute filters to quickly narrow a universe of stocks down to names that fit their own mandate or risk profile before doing deeper research. On this page you can review stocks that currently qualify for the dividend stocks (broad) bucket using transparent, rules-based criteria. The goal is to surface a starting universe for further analysis rather than to provide buy or sell recommendations, so you can combine these tags with your own process and the Valuation Tool.
- Stocks matching
- 3,190
- Latest data
- 2026-06-28
Highest Investment Scores in Dividend Stocks (Broad)
Top-rated stocks by Investment Score
- Price
- $91.19
- Fair Value
- $355.29
- Market Cap
- $21.2B
- Margin
- +289.6%
- Price
- $175.25
- Fair Value
- $263.72
- Market Cap
- $2.3B
- Margin
- +50.5%
- Price
- $41.36
- Fair Value
- $55.84
- Market Cap
- $1.1B
- Margin
- +35.0%
- Price
- $72.34
- Fair Value
- $69.18
- Market Cap
- $5.1B
- Margin
- -4.4%
Dividend Stocks (Broad) Stock List
| Company | Price | Fair Value | Score | Market Cap | P/E | EPS | Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Palantir Technologies Inc. PLTR | $116.67 | $2.22 | 74 | $259.3B | 117.6 | $0.95 | 0.00% |
Wells Fargo & Company WFC | $82.64 | $148.57 | 45 | $256.7B | 12.7 | $6.84 | 2.15% |
International Business Machines Corporation IBM | $281.21 | $192.80 | 65 | $255.3B | 23.6 | $11.46 | 2.48% |
RTX Corporation RTX | $189.73 | $107.39 | 74 | $253.2B | 34.8 | $5.38 | 1.47% |
Citigroup Inc. C | $139.96 | $193.89 | 42 | $241.6B | 17.3 | $9.21 | 1.69% |
Linde plc LIN | $518.94 | $243.28 | 68 | $240.4B | 34.3 | $15.35 | 1.19% |
American Express Company AXP | $338.25 | $380.90 | 68 | $232.2B | 21.2 | $16.36 | 1.00% |
Palo Alto Networks, Inc. PANW | $341.02 | $13.50 | 48 | $207.3B | 255.6 | $1.16 | 0.00% |
Western Digital Corporation WDC | $638.72 | $16.16 | 65 | $202.1B | 31.4 | $18.80 | 0.09% |
The Toronto-Dominion Bank TD | $121.43 | $273.28 | 42 | $202.1B | 20.0 | $8.98 | 2.51% |
Seagate Technology Holdings plc STX | $965.00 | $52.11 | 48 | $201.8B | 81.7 | $10.76 | 0.33% |
Amphenol Corporation APH | $176.32 | $79.22 | 71 | $201.4B | 44.7 | $3.64 | 0.56% |
QUALCOMM Incorporated QCOM | $184.79 | $233.67 | 84 | $199.6B | 20.3 | $9.31 | 1.90% |
Arista Networks, Inc. ANET | $169.88 | $61.16 | 68 | $198.4B | 53.2 | $2.96 | 0.00% |
T-Mobile US, Inc. TMUS | $167.73 | $203.79 | 58 | $197.7B | 19.4 | $9.58 | 2.16% |
Verizon Communications Inc. VZ | $42.34 | $62.89 | 58 | $194.3B | 11.3 | $4.12 | 5.94% |
Amgen Inc. AMGN | $362.12 | $423.35 | 77 | $193.4B | 24.8 | $14.44 | 2.73% |
PepsiCo, Inc. PEP | $135.40 | $153.65 | 68 | $193.3B | 22.2 | $6.40 | 4.06% |
Corning Inc GLW | $255.43 | $37.19 | 61 | $191.9B | 105.7 | $2.10 | 0.50% |
McDonald's Corporation MCD | $270.31 | $313.69 | 58 | $191.7B | 22.2 | $12.21 | 2.72% |
Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. TMO | $501.36 | $422.35 | 55 | $190.7B | 28.2 | $18.44 | 0.35% |
Analog Devices, Inc. ADI | $397.17 | $137.10 | 61 | $188.5B | 57.2 | $6.80 | 1.08% |
NextEra Energy, Inc. NEE | $87.77 | $86.79 | 48 | $184.7B | 22.4 | $3.92 | 2.69% |
The Walt Disney Company DIS | $96.25 | $103.65 | 81 | $171.5B | 15.8 | $6.36 | 1.27% |
The TJX Companies, Inc. TJX | $151.50 | $102.66 | 74 | $171.5B | 30.1 | $5.17 | 1.13% |
About dividend stocks (broad)
A dividend stock — defined as a name that pays a positive trailing dividend — covers a much wider range of business profiles than most investors initially expect. At one end sit utility companies, mature consumer staples, and integrated energy majors paying out the bulk of their free cash flow. At the other end sit large-cap growth businesses paying out a token quarterly dividend that yields well below 1% on the current share price. Both groups belong on the same page if the question is "which covered names pay a dividend at all," and that's the screen this page applies.
The breadth is the point. By not filtering on yield level, payout coverage, or sector, the page captures the full population of US-listed dividend payers and lets the user narrow further using the table's sorts and the related screening pages linked below. The High-Yield page narrows on yield level; the Dividend style page narrows on yield plus a P/E filter; this page is the universe both of those subsets are drawn from.
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 the segment for the first time.
If you want to value a single dividend stock end-to-end rather than scan the segment, the Invest Viable Valuator walks through the same models we use to compute the base valuations on this page.
How we screen Dividend Stocks (Broad)
A stock is included on this page when it currently pays a dividend, regardless of yield level. The screen captures the broad dividend-paying universe — from low-yield growth dividend payers through to high-yield income names.
Yield > 0
- The High-Yield Stocks screener narrows this list to names with yield ≥ 5%; the Dividend style screener applies a multi-factor filter that also requires a P/E above zero.
- Recent special dividends and one-time payouts can briefly include companies that don't have a regular dividend programme; the trailing yield calculation smooths this for most names but not all.
Frequently asked questions
What counts as a dividend stock on Invest Viable?
Any covered US-listed company with a positive trailing dividend yield. The cut-off is intentionally low so the page captures the full dividend-paying universe — sub-1% growth-style payers, mid-yield mature businesses, and high-yield income names — without filtering on payout sustainability.
How is this different from the High-Yield Stocks page?
This page covers all dividend payers; High-Yield narrows to those with trailing yields of 5% or above. Most well-known dividend names sit between 1% and 4%, which is the broad-dividend territory rather than the high-yield segment.
Why include sub-1% yields on a dividend page?
Some of the most consistent multi-decade dividend growers carry low current yields because their share prices have appreciated faster than their payouts. Excluding them would remove names that many income-oriented investors do follow because the long-run trend in dividend-per-share matters as much as the spot yield.
How is the Dividend style page different from this one?
The Dividend style screen applies a multi-factor rule (Yield ≥ 2% AND P/E > 0) intended to surface names with reasonable valuation alongside meaningful income. This page is a broader population — every dividend payer, no quality or valuation filter.
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.