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Dividend stocks have quietly outperformed growth names so far in 2026 S&P 500The 1.2% yield looks weak ahead of inflation which is still near 2.5%. Retail investors looking for reliable income put money into ETFs that screen for quality issuers with long histories of growth.
Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: SCHD) has just given its first-quarter distribution for 2026. The payout came at exactly $0.2569 per share, a 3.3% year-over-year jump that confirms the ETF’s upside. Or is it really indicating slow growth onset? Let’s examine the numbers and what they mean for your income stream.
What changed and why it matters
The Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF now yields 3.46% on a trailing basis. Granted, the payout sits below the $0.2782 it delivered in December, but once you understand the mechanics the decline seems normal.
ETF holdings pay dividends on their own schedule, and Q1 often reflects lighter payouts than year-end distributions. Schwab has increased its quarterly dividend from about $0.04 in 2011 to about $0.28 by the end of last year — a nearly sevenfold increase. Full year distributions have increased by more than 13% annually since inception and by approximately 11% over the past five years.
The last thing on cash: A share bought today at about $30.56 generates $1.05 in annual dividends, based on the last four quarters ending with this payment. Reinvest those dollars at the current price and your shares will compound without adding new capital. That’s how Schwab turns a 3.45% yield into double-digit earnings growth over time.
Why does restructuring keep the dividend flowing?
Dividend Tracks ETFs Dow Jones US Dividend 100 IndexWhich is rebalanced every March. This year’s reorganization Came into effect on 23 March. The index removed three energy names and five consumer cyclical stocks, while adding 11 financial-services companies that have above-average dividend-growth rates.
This is a weird way of saying that the rules force ETFs to sell winners whose yields have fallen short of price gains and replace them with higher quality producers trading at better valuations. The result is a mechanical “buy low, sell high” strategy that has delivered a 481% cumulative total return since 2011. Top Holdings now trade at Forward P/E ratios between 15.23 and 15.33, well below the S&P 500’s multiple of 22.5. This shift reduced energy exposure while raising financials, health care and technology – sectors whose average five-year dividend growth rates are higher than those removed.
Believe it or not, this annual reshuffle has kept SCHD’s dividend growth on track, even through rate increases and sector rotation. The fund’s expense ratio on a $10,000 investment is 0.06%, or $6 annually. That lower cost means more of the 3.45% yielding land in your pocket instead of the manager’s.
How does SCHD stack up against the competition?
No dividend ETF exists in a vacuum. Here’s how SCHD compares across key metrics, according to preliminary data through April 2026 from StockAnalysis.com:
| etf | expense ratio | dividend yield | 10-year average. annual dividend increase | Forward P/E |
| Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF | 0.06% | 3.46% | 11.6% | 17.10 |
| Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (NYSEARCA:Wig) | 0.04% | 1.60% | 6.6% | 24.76 |
| iShares Core Dividend Growth ETF (NYSEARCA:DGRO) | 0.08% | 2.09% | 8.6% | 21.00 |
| Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (NYSEARCA:VYM) | 0.04% | 2.37% | 5.0% | 19.88 |
The Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF offers the highest yield by a wide margin while recording the strongest long-term dividend growth. Its 0.06% fee sits in the middle of the pack — so cheap that the extra yield more than makes up for the modest premium on Vanguard’s two ETFs. The low P/E reflects a focus on cash-flow machines rather than high-growth machines, which can cut payouts when times get tight.
In short, Schwab doesn’t chase catchy names; It has 100 blue-chip dividend payers that have had consistent growth for at least 10 years, examining cash flow, yield and growth.
key takeaway
This new dividend is not going to make headlines in itself. Yet it extends a 15-year pattern of consistent growth that has translated into market-beating earnings. With a restructuring that tilts the portfolio toward fast-growing financial names at attractive valuations, Schwab is poised for long-term compounding at a 3.45% yield and 0.06% cost.
It’s worth dollar cost averaging into ETFs today, locking in that edge and keeping it without guessing sector timing. part of your original stake. Reinvest the dividends, and let the math do the heavy lifting. Your portfolio – and your future income – will be better for it.
