Many investors target dividend stocks purely because they want a fixed-income portfolio, but some go even further and look for companies that are growing their dividends steadily. Not all companies pay dividends, but those that do are using dividends to return some of their profits to shareholders.
The stocks of companies that grow their dividends regularly act as an inflation hedge because as prices rise, their earnings and profits should increase as they raise prices, passing their rising costs onto consumers.
Q1 2022 hedge fund letters, conferences and more
At the 2022 Virtual Value Investing Conference held by Ivey Business School's Ben Graham Centre for Value Investing, Izet Elmazi of Bristol...



