If there is one myth income investors love to repeat, it’s this: “Dividends are steady.” Steady like gravity. Steady like sunrise. Steady like your uncle’s opinion about gold. Except they’re not. Dividends are corporate decisions. And corporate decisions live inside economic cycles. Recessions happen. Credit tightens. Margins compress. Boards panic. CFOs start speaking in phrases like “capital allocation flexibility.” Yet some companies keep increasing dividends anyway. Not once. Not twice. But through multiple recessions, rate shocks, commodity collapses, pandemics, and geopolitical tantrums. That phenomenon— dividend growth persistence across economic cycles —is not luck. It’s structure. Today, we’re building an empirical framework to understand it. Because if you’re serious about income investing, you don’t want yesterday’s dividend. You want tomorrow’s. Why Dividend Growth Persistence Matters Dividend growth persistence is the probability that a company will continue inc...
(A deep dive into why cash — not accounting earnings — determines whether income investors sleep well at night.) Introduction: The Quiet Mathematics Behind Reliable Income Income investing looks simple from the outside. Buy a company. Collect the distribution. Repeat until retirement looks comfortable. But anyone who has survived a surprise dividend cut knows the truth: income stability isn’t built on promises, earnings per share, or executive optimism. It’s built on cash. Specifically, free cash flow and the relationship between that cash and what a company commits to paying shareholders. Distribution policies — whether dividends, REIT payouts, or partnership distributions — are often marketed as signals of stability. Yet history is filled with examples of companies that maintained high payout ratios right up until they couldn’t. The difference between sustainable distributions and future disappointment often comes down to one overlooked metric: Free Cash Flow Coverage Ratios...