This High-Conviction Dividend Stock Just Triggered a Rare Buying Opportunity for Passive Income Investors

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By Alex Sirois Published

Quick Read

  • RSG has pulled back 17% over the past year, offering a rare entry into a non-discretionary compounder with CPI-linked pricing that expanded EBITDA margins to 32%.

  • Republic's dividend grew from $0.06 to $0.63 per quarter since 2003, backed by $2.43 billion in 2025 free cash flow and a payout ratio with decades of room to grow.

  • Cascade Investment, a 10% owner, accumulated RSG shares in May 2026 at $197 to $215, reinforcing institutional conviction at current prices.

  • The Motley Fool told its subscribers to buy Amazon in 2002, Netflix in 2004, and Nvidia in 2005. Stock Advisor still publishes two new stock picks every month — and over 23 years, has more than quadrupled the S&P 500. Click here to receive the next recommendation.

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This High-Conviction Dividend Stock Just Triggered a Rare Buying Opportunity for Passive Income Investors

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Republic Services (NYSE:RSG | RSG Price Prediction) is a stock built to be owned for decades, because it sits at the intersection of a non-discretionary service economy and a pricing model that compounds quietly through every macro regime. Republic Services trades at $204.94 after a 16.54% drawdown over the past year, and that pullback is the relevant detail for an investor who measures holding periods in decades rather than quarters.

Pillar One: A Business That Cannot Be Disrupted

Waste collection is the closest thing the public markets offer to a utility without the regulated return cap. Republic is the second largest provider of non-hazardous solid waste collection, transfer, disposal, recycling, and energy services in the United States, and its $3.71 billion Recycling & Waste segment runs on hyper-local route density that cannot be replicated by a new entrant. The company leans on long-term municipal and commercial contracts with built-in, CPI-linked pricing adjustments that pass fuel and labor inflation directly to customers. Average hourly earnings climbed to $37.53 in May 2026, yet Republic still pushed core price on total revenue +5.7% in Q1 2026, expanding adjusted EBITDA margin 50 bps to 32.1%. The pivot into capturing landfill methane gas and processing it into renewable natural gas (RNG) layers a high-margin annuity on top of an already defensive asset base, with 9 projects commenced in 2025.

Pillar Two: Income That Compounds Without Drama

The dividend is the engine for a forever holder. Republic has paid uninterrupted quarterly dividends with no reductions or suspensions since at least 2003, growing the payout from $0.06 per quarter in 2003 to $0.625 per quarter in 2026. The most recent raise, an ~8% increase in mid-2025, is funded by free cash flow that grew 73.85% year over year in Q1 2026 to $984 million. Full-year 2025 free cash flow reached $2.43 billion, and management returned $1.6 billion to shareholders through dividends and buybacks. With 2026 guidance calling for adjusted EPS of $7.20 to $7.28, the payout ratio leaves enormous room for decades of further increases.

Pillar Three: Built to Survive Every Cycle

Republic carries a beta of 0.415, meaning the stock barely flinches when the broader market convulses. The company absorbed $56 million in labor disruption costs during 2025 and still expanded full-year EBITDA margin by 90 bps. Conviction at the top is visible: Cascade Investment, a 10% owner, accumulated shares across May 2026 at prices between $197.18 and $215.11.

The One Scenario Where It Lags

In risk-on rallies driven by high-growth technology names, a defensive hauler trading at 30 times earnings will lag the broader market. That gap is the price of admission for a business whose cash flows are indifferent to recessions, election cycles, and commodity routs. Recycled commodity prices already fell to $120 per ton from $155 per ton, and the pricing engine still delivered margin expansion. Underperformance in a melt-up validates the thesis.

Republic Services fits a long-duration compounder profile rather than a short-term trading vehicle.

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About the Author Alex Sirois →

Alex Sirois is a financial writer with experience spanning both retail and institutional investing. He has written for InvestorPlace and held roles at BNY Mellon and Bernstein, giving him a perspective that bridges Main Street portfolios and Wall Street analysis.

Alex holds an MBA from George Washington University and has built his career across multiple industries, including e-commerce, education, and translation — a breadth of experience that informs how he breaks down complex financial topics for everyday investors. His writing is conversational, actionable, and grounded in long-term, buy-and-hold investing principles.

At 247 Wall St., Alex focuses on delivering analysis that is both accessible and useful, with a clear emphasis on helping readers make more informed decisions with their money.

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