Meet the Newest Dividend Stock in the Dow Jones. It May Be the Next Stock-Split Stock Too.

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The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI) tracks 30 blue-chip companies, meaning its constituents are stocks of the highest quality. The index is not governed by strict rules, but the selection committee prioritizes well-known companies with sterling reputations and histories of sustained growth.

Generally speaking, blue-chip companies produce consistent cash flows, and many divvy up a portion of their profits among shareholders. Indeed, 29 of the 30 companies in the Dow Jones currently pay dividends, and Salesforce (NYSE: CRM) is the newest member of that group. The software giant declared its first-ever quarterly dividend in February; shareholders of record as of March 14 will receive $0.40 per share on April 11.

However, Salesforce may have another exciting announcement in the near future. This is pure speculation, but with its share price around $300, the company may decide to split its stock this year. Of course, whether that happens or not matters very little. Salesforce would be the same business in either scenario. But what does matter are the circumstances that made the stock split plausible.

Specifically, Salesforce last split its stock on April 18, 2013, and its share price has soared 625% since then, compounding at an annual rate of 19.8%. For context, Salesforce more than tripled the return of the Dow Jones during that period. That outperformance hints at a competitive advantage, and investors should strive to own such stocks.

Is Salesforce a buy right now?

Salesforce is the gold standard in CRM software

Salesforce provides customer relationship management (CRM) software. Its platform includes productivity applications for sales, marketing, service, and commerce teams, as well as tools for application development, workflow automation, and data analytics. Collectively, those CRM products help businesses build and expand customer relationships over time.

Salesforce has dominated the CRM software market for the last 10 years. It accounted for 22.1% of CRM spending through the first half of 2023, more than the next four companies combined, and that dominance was broad based. To elaborate, Salesforce has a strong presence in several subcategories of CRM software, including multichannel marketing, digital commerce, customer service, and sales force automation. Additionally, peer-review-based research firm G2 ranked Salesforce as the best software seller in any product category in 2024, citing its strong foothold in multiple markets and its high customer satisfaction scores.

Salesforce reported solid fourth-quarter financial results, beating expectations on the top and bottom lines. Revenue increased 11% to $9.2 billion and non-GAAP net income increased 36% to $2.29 per diluted share. In the coming quarters, investors can expect similar momentum at a minimum, but growth could accelerate as Salesforce leans into artificial intelligence (AI) with two new products.