This may change your view.

Here’s the proof, from our friends at Hartford Funds.
Hartford looked at the years between 1960 and the end of 2024, which included everything: the inflation of the ’70s, economic crashes in 2001 and 2008 and, of course, the pandemic.
Here’s what they found: if you’d put $10,000 in the S&P 500 in 1960, you would have had $982,072 at the end of the period, based solely on price gains.
That’s not bad: a 9,721% increase.
It shows you why most folks only think about share prices when they invest. After all, with a gain like that, it’s tough to get excited about a dividend that dribbles a few cents your way every quarter.
But here’s the thing: when you reinvest your dividends, the magic of compounding kicks in. The difference is shocking: your $10,000 would have grown to $6,399,429, or more than $5.4 million more than you’d have booked on price gains alone!

That’s a 63,894% profit.
It’s a crystal clear example of how critical dividends are. And you can grab stronger profits if you buy stocks whose dividends aren’t just growing but accelerating.

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