3 Top Dividend Stocks to Buy Now

Talk about top or best dividend stocks, and chances are, high-yielding stocks will be the focus of the conversation. It's true that yield is a key deciding factor for dividend-seeking investors, but high yield doesn't necessarily make a great dividend stock. Prudent income investors should look beyond yields and pay greater attention to a company's cash flows trend, dividend growth prospects, and history among other things, before adding stocks to their portfolios. If cash flows and dividends aren't growing, a high-yield stock could even trap you.

For example, CenturyLink's (NYSE: CTL) dividend yield has now shot up to 16%, attracting value and income investors alike. Some investors are betting on the telecom's acquisition of Level 3 Communications to help it ride out the storm, but in the absence of any earnings growth visibility as of yet and a payout above 100%, CenturyLink's dividend looks as risky as it can get.

As a long-term dividend-minded investor, you might want to avoid CenturyLink right now. Instead, you should be looking for stocks in top-quality businesses with strong earnings growth potential that can pay you stable, and even higher, dividends year after year. Three such top dividend stocks that you can buy today are industrial conglomerate 3M (NYSE: MMM), alternative-asset manager Brookfield Asset Management's (NYSE: BAM) infrastructure arm Brookfield Infrastructure Partners (NYSE: BIP), and midstream oil and gas play Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE: EPD).

This dividend stock is a gold mine for income investors

Brookfield Infrastructure Partners was spun off from Brookfield Asset Management in 2008, and the stock hasn't looked back since -- it has been a five-bagger over the period, with nearly half of those returns coming off dividends alone. The stock's current yield of 3.9% looks very safe.

A roll of dollars with a dividend sign beside it.
A roll of dollars with a dividend sign beside it.

Buying top dividend stocks at the right time can boost your income substantially. Image source: Getty Images.

In fact, Brookfield is growing at a far stronger pace than its parent organization, having grown its funds from operations more than tenfold in the past decade compared to the 90% growth in Brookfield Asset Management's FFO. Two things have worked in Brookfield Infrastructure's favor: a top-quality portfolio of assets and a credible management that is efficiently steering the company to growth.

As an infrastructure assets company, Brookfield acquires high-quality, distressed assets at value prices across key sectors like utilities, railroads, telecommunications, infrastructure, and energy, and turns them around profitably. The fact that most of these industries offer essential services and thus generate regulated or long-term contracted revenue goes a long way in helping Brookfield earn stable cash flows and offer steady dividends.