Tariff Troubles Are No Match for This Dividend King’s Rock-Solid High-Yield Payout


Earnings seasons are excellent opportunities to get updates on where companies are and where they could be headed. This earnings season carries extra importance as a lot has changed in the last three months that could throw a wrench into companies’ near-term guidance.

Consumer staples giant Kimberly-Clark (NYSE: KMB) just reported weaker-than-expected results and cut its full-year outlook. The company has dozens of everyday-use brands and professional products centered on paper — from paper towels and toilet paper to diapers and feminine products.

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Steady demand for Kimberly-Clark’s products, no matter what the economy is doing, has allowed the company to raise its dividend for 53 consecutive years, earning it a coveted spot on the list of Dividend Kings. The stock yields a hefty 3.8% as of this writing — making it a solid source of passive income.

Here’s why Kimberly-Clark is a reliable dividend stock to buy now for risk-averse investors.

A baby smiles while an adult changes its diaper.
Image source: Getty Images.

Tariff talks were far less tense when Kimberly-Clark provided its initial 2025 outlook in late January.

The company originally expected 2025 organic sales growth to outpace the weighted average by 2% in the categories and countries in which it competes. It has since lowered that guidance to a range of 1.5% to 2%. The most significant guidance cut was to adjusted earnings per share (EPS) — which are expected to be flat to positive on a constant currency basis compared to earlier guidance of mid-to-high single-digit growth.

Kimberly-Clark also expects free cash flow (FCF) of $2 billion, compared to an earlier forecast of more than $2 billion.

The lackluster growth is nothing new for longtime Kimberly-Clark investors. As you can see in the following chart, Kimberly-Clark’s stock price has stagnated over the last decade, operating margins have consistently been in the mid-teens range, and revenue is up only modestly in recent years.

KMB Chart
Data by YCharts.

As my colleague Eric Volkman pointed out, companies shouldn’t use trade tensions as an excuse for underwhelming results. And Kimberly-Clark has been underperforming its peer group for years now.

Last year, the company launched its multiyear Powering Care strategy, which reorganizes the company into three segments — North America, international personal care, and international family care. The move aims to streamline operations, enhance flexibility, and simplify reporting structures. However, as Kimberly-Clark’s latest guidance suggests, the impact of the Powering Care strategy will take time to show up in its results.

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