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The Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (NYSEARCA:VIG | VIG Price Prediction) owns only companies with at least 10 consecutive years of dividend growth, screens out the highest yielders, and lets compounding work. VIG has returned 22% over the past year and 244% over the past decade, a track record that owes as much to its tech-heavy roster as to traditional aristocrats. This review examines whether the income engine inside VIG is built to keep paying.
How VIG pays you
VIG tracks the S&P U.S. Dividend Growers Index, which excludes the top quartile of yielders. By design, the fund skips Altria-style payouts and leans toward companies whose dividends are still climbing off a low base. Income flows from roughly 300 underlying stocks, so VIG’s distribution is only as safe as the payout policies of its largest holdings.
The tech engines: Broadcom, Apple, Microsoft
Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO) generated $8.01 billion of free cash flow in Q1 FY26, up 33%, while paying a $0.65 quarterly dividend. AI semiconductor revenue grew 106% year over year, and the dividend consumes a small fraction of cash generation.
Apple raised its quarterly payout roughly 4% to $0.27 in May, extending an unbroken annual cadence since 2012. Trailing EPS of $8.26 against an annual payout of $1.04 means Apple returns roughly an eighth of earnings as dividends. The low payout ratio is why the dividend itself is unassailable.
Microsoft faces an interesting safety case. Quarterly CapEx hit $30.88 billion, up 84%, as Satya Nadella floods money into AI infrastructure. Operating cash flow was $46.68 billion in the quarter, and Microsoft still raised its dividend from $0.83 to $0.91. With a payout ratio near 22% of TTM EPS of $16.81, AI spending does not threaten the dividend.
The defensive anchors: J&J and Visa
Johnson & Johnson raised its payout to $1.34, extending its dividend-growth streak to 64 consecutive years. Q1 net income fell on $330 million in litigation charges and the Intra-Cellular deal, and STELARA sales dropped 60%. Management raised full-year guidance to adjusted EPS of $11.45 to $11.65, easily covering the payout. J&J holds one of two AAA corporate credit ratings in the country.
Visa lifted its quarterly dividend to $0.67 last November, roughly a 14% jump. Trailing EPS of $11.46 dwarfs the $2.60 annual payout, and operating cash flow of $6.78 billion in the quarter easily covers a $707 million litigation provision.
The total return question
VIG’s yield is near 1.7%, which frustrates pure income hunters. Broadcom is up 86% over the past year, Apple 59%, and J&J 56%. Microsoft is down 7% on AI CapEx digestion, a reminder that even dividend growers face drawdowns. The fund’s tech tilt converted a 1.7% yield into a near 22% total return.
Verdict
VIG’s distribution is as safe as any equity-dividend product on the market. Every top-five holding covers its payout with a fraction of free cash flow, and the index methodology automatically prunes companies that stop growing dividends. Investors wanting high current yield should look elsewhere. For investors wanting dividend reliability and tech-driven capital appreciation in one wrapper, VIG remains the cleanest expression of that thesis.
