3 High-Yield Stocks to Compound Your Dividends

It's easy to fall in love with a stock that sports a generous dividend yield, but savvy investors know that steady dividend growth is even more enticing than yield. Dividend growth allows investors to harness the power of compounding, which can transform today's modest dividend payer into a superstar yielder as dividends rise year after year. If fact, this is exactly the kind of strategy Amy Calistri uses in her Daily Paycheck newsletter.

The table below illustrates the power of compounding using the Coca-Cola Co. (NYSE: KO) as an example. In the past decade, Coca-Cola has increased its dividend roughly 10% a year. Today, the stock yields about 2.5%, but if dividends continue to grow by 10%, yield (on the original investment) climbs to 4.0% by year five and exceeds 5% by year seven -- nearly double the initial yield.

My example assumes 100 shares purchased today for $78, a total initial investment of $7,800...

I identified other attractive dividend growth stocks by running a screen for companies that have at least seven consecutive years of 10% or higher dividend growth and payout ratios of 50% or less.

A conservative payout ratio is desirable, because it gives companies flexibility and the ability to raise dividends through good times and bad. Each of the three stocks below is a standout based on consistent high-dividend growth, safety and above-average yield.

1. Walgreen Co. (NYSE: WAG)

Yield: 4%

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Walgreen is the United States' leading drug store chain, with about 8,000 stores in the United States and Puerto Rico. Last year, it filled a record 819 million prescriptions -- that's one in every five retail prescriptions in the country.

Walgreen's earnings per share (EPS) dropped 2% in the first nine months of fiscal 2012 ended May 31 to $2.03 from a year earlier, mainly due to the company's ongoing contract dispute with Express Scripts (Nasdaq: ESRX), which caused the number of prescriptions filled to fall.

But Walgreen just announced a major acquisition that should re-energize growth. The company plans to acquire a stake in Alliance Boot, Europe's leading pharmacy chain, for $6.7 billion. Together, the two companies will form the world's largest drug store chain, with 11,000 retail stores in 12 countries. Walgreen expects the merger to be immediately accretive and add as much as $0.27 to fiscal year 2013 earnings per share.

Walgreen has raised dividends 37 years in a row and by a 19% annual rate in the past 10 years. In June, the company hiked its dividend 22.5% to a $1.10 annual rate yielding almost 4%. Walgreen plans to maintain payout at less than 40%.