Kinder Morgan, Inc. (KMI): One of the Top Dividend Challengers in 2025
According to analysts, investors can adopt a strategy that balances both income and growth by focusing on dividend growers. Historically, they have shown less volatility and often outperformed the broader market, including benchmarks like the S&P Equal Weight Index. A report from Guggenheim found that between May 2005 and December 2024, companies that initiated or raised their dividends achieved an average annual return of 10.5%, compared to just 5.5% for those that reduced or suspended payouts. By contrast, the overall market averaged a 10.4% return during the same period, slightly lagging behind the dividend growers. The report also emphasized that dividend growth strategies tend to perform well across different market environments, both bullish and bearish. This makes them a compelling option for investors seeking long-term returns while aiming to protect their portfolios during downturns.
Investor interest in stocks with reliable dividend growth remains strong due to long-term investment potential. As a result, many of these financially sound firms become targets for investors looking to manage risk without sacrificing growth. The Fidelity Equity-Income Fund and the Fidelity Global Equity Income Fund portfolios, managed by Ramona Persaud, seek stable dividend-paying firms with attractive valuations. She pointed out that declining interest rates tend to make dividend stocks more appealing than bonds due to relatively attractive yields. Indeed, Persaud argued lower rates could foster a more broad-based rally for stocks beyond the market gains, which have been largely concentrated on a handful of large-cap growth names. Her focus is on well-performing firms with reliable cash flows and strong, growing dividends.
Dividend Challengers refers to US-listed companies that have raised their dividends every year for a minimum of five, and less than ten, consecutive years. These companies have demonstrated a relatively recent commitment to sharing profits with shareholders through dividends. Investors usually gravitate towards such firms because historically, dividend growers outperform the returns of the broader market. Moreover, most of these firms have a track record of exhibiting lower price volatility, which makes them favorable to those looking for stable income.
We recently published a list of Dividend Challengers 2025: Top 25 . In this article, we are going to take a look at where Kinder Morgan, Inc. (NYSE:KMI) stands against other dividend challenger stocks.
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'In March, as global equities fell -4.1% on concerns tariffs could increase and slow growth, the best performing global styles were Value and Dividends.'
As investor interest in dividend-paying stocks continues to climb, many companies have responded by steadily boosting their payouts. According to a report from Janus Henderson, global dividend distributions hit a record $1.75 trillion in 2024, marking a 6.6% increase on an underlying basis. The total headline growth stood at 5.2%, slightly tempered by a decline in special one-time dividends and the impact of a stronger US dollar. Of the 49 countries tracked in the report, 17—including key markets like the US, Canada, France, Japan, and China—achieved new highs in dividend payments. Overall, 88% of companies either raised or maintained their dividends during the year. Looking ahead, Janus Henderson expects global dividend payouts to grow by 5.0% on a headline basis in the coming year, reaching another record of $1.83 trillion. Despite ongoing currency pressures from a strong dollar, the firm projects underlying growth to edge slightly higher to about 5.1%.
Kinder Morgan, Inc. (KMI): One of the Top Dividend Challengers in 2025
Aerial view of an oil and gas pipeline, spanning vast landscapes.
Our Methodology
For this list, we looked at a group of dividend challengers, recognized for consistently increasing dividends for 5 consecutive years, but for less than 10 years. From this list, we chose companies with the highest dividend yields as of April 29 and arranged them in order from lowest to highest yield.
At Insider Monkey, we are obsessed with hedge funds. Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter's strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 373.4% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 218 percentage points (see more details here).
Kinder Morgan, Inc. (NYSE:KMI)
Dividend Yield as of April 29: 4.30%
Kinder Morgan, Inc. (NYSE:KMI) is an energy infrastructure company in North America that owns oil and gas pipelines and terminals. The company moves roughly 40% of the nation's natural gas production through its extensive network of 66,000 miles of pipelines. Natural gas makes up about 65% of its overall business. It maintains a strong outlook on the long-term demand for natural gas. It pointed out that US natural gas consumption has climbed by 80% over the past two decades, increasing from 60 billion cubic feet per day in 2005 to 109 billion cubic feet per day in 2024. In the past 12 months, the stock has delivered an over 44% return to shareholders.
Kinder Morgan, Inc. (NYSE:KMI) reported solid earnings in the first quarter of 2025. The company posted revenue of $4.24 billion, up 10% from the same period last year. The revenue also beat analysts' estimates by $215 million. Its adjusted EBITDA came in at $2.1 billion, up 1% on a YoY basis. The company delivered strong operational results, with higher financial contributions from its Natural Gas Pipelines, CO₂, and Terminals segments compared to the first quarter of 2024. However, performance in the Products Pipelines segment declined, primarily due to a scheduled turnaround at the condensate processing facility—an event that occurs once every ten years.
Kinder Morgan, Inc. (NYSE:KMI) continued to self-fund high-quality capital projects, generating $1.2 billion in operating cash flow and $400 million in free cash flow after capital expenditures. The company maintained a solid financial position, ending the quarter with a Net Debt-to-Adjusted EBITDA ratio of 4.1 times. In addition, it expanded its footprint in the Bakken region through the $640 million acquisition of Outrigger Energy II's gathering and processing system, supported by long-term agreements with key customers in the area.
On April 16, Kinder Morgan, Inc. (NYSE:KMI) announced a 1.7% increase in its quarterly dividend to $0.2925 per share. Through this increase, the company stretched its dividend growth streak to eight years, which makes it one of the best stocks on our dividend challengers list. The stock has a dividend yield of 4.3%, as of April 29.
Overall, KMI ranks 8th on our dividend challengers list. While we acknowledge the potential of KMI as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some deeply undervalued dividend stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns, and doing so within a shorter time frame. If you are looking for a deeply undervalued dividend stock that is more promising than KMI but that trades at 10 times its earnings and grows its earnings at double digit rates annually, check out our report about the dirt cheap dividend stock.
READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires.
Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.
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