The AAM S&P 500 High Dividend Value ETF (NYSEARCA:SPDV) screens the S&P 500 for companies that pair above-average yields with above-average free cash flow, then equal-weights five names from each of ten sectors. SPDV functions as a future-aristocrats farm system, and the holdings list reads like one: a confirmed Dividend King, two near-aristocrats, and three emerging growers. With SPDV up 13.3% year to date and 24.7% over the past year, the question is whether the income engine under the hood is as durable as the price action suggests.
How SPDV builds its payout
SPDV does not write options, hold bonds, or use leverage. Its distribution is simply the sum of the dividends paid by its underlying stocks, net of a small expense load. Dividend safety lives at the holding level. If the largest payers keep raising, SPDV’s distribution keeps rising. If two or three crack, the fund’s income notches lower. Several names cover the spectrum of risk inside the portfolio.
The Dividend King anchor
Johnson & Johnson is the cleanest piece of the income story. The board lifted the payout to $1.34 per quarter, extending a streak to 64 consecutive years. Q1 revenue rose 9.9% to $24.06 billion, and the payout ratio sits near 60% on TTM EPS of $8.63. Litigation charges depressed reported net income, but the cash dividend is funded out of operating cash flow that the AAA-rated balance sheet protects easily.
Texas Instruments: aristocrat math arriving
Texas Instruments raised its quarterly dividend to $1.42, marking 22 straight years of increases. The Q1 free cash flow swing to $1.40 billion (up 610% year over year) as capex moderates confirms the heavy 300mm build phase is converting into cash. Trailing twelve-month FCF of $4.4 billion against $6.0 billion returned to owners still leans on cash reserves, but the trend is moving the right way.
Microsoft and Visa: the emerging growers
Microsoft yields only 0.77%, but the payout ratio of roughly 21% on $16.81 TTM EPS is what aristocrat candidacies are built on. Operating cash flow of $46.68 billion last quarter swallowed an 84% jump in capex and still left ample room. The dividend has climbed from $0.75 to $0.91 in roughly two years.
Visa tells a similar story. The dividend rose from $0.59 to $0.67, payout ratio sits in the low 20s, and Q1 operating cash flow of $6.78 billion dwarfs the cash dividend. The stock is down 14% over the past year on interchange litigation noise, but the distribution itself is among the safest in SPDV.
The two cautions: Broadcom and Lockheed
Broadcom generated $10.26 billion in Q2 free cash flow (46% of revenue), more than enough to cover the $0.65 quarterly dividend. The caveat is elevated debt flagged in its own filings; if AI semi revenue cools from its current $10.8 billion run rate, debt service competes with dividend growth.
Lockheed Martin is where holders need to focus. Q1 free cash flow turned negative $291 million against $816 million paid in dividends, a one-quarter mismatch tied to working capital and F-16 charges. Management reaffirmed $6.5 to $6.8 billion in full-year FCF, which would comfortably cover the raised $3.45 quarterly payout. The streak of 23-plus years stays intact, but Q2 cash conversion is the number to track.
Verdict
SPDV’s distribution looks durable. Four of the six headline names sit on payout ratios that leave meaningful cushion, and Broadcom’s free cash flow more than covers its dividend even with leverage in the background. Lockheed is the genuine watch item, but a single weak quarter has not broken the multi-decade pattern. For investors seeking exposure to companies likely to join the Aristocrat list rather than chasing the highest current yield, the methodology delivers what it advertises.