
Few things matter more to long-term investors than a company that keeps paying (and growing) its dividend year after year.
A VanEck report states:
“Dividend investing can provide steady income and long-term growth but requires careful selection to avoid unsustainable payouts and dividend traps.”
As dividend payers tend to maintain solid balance sheets and stable cash flows, they make good defensive investments.
That context matters right now, especially for shareholders of International Business Machines , a Dividend Aristocrat and a Dow 30 member, that has one of the most durable income track records in all of tech.
International Business Machines (IBM) is expected to announce another dividend increase this month.
If it does, it will mark the company's 27th consecutive year of dividend growth, a milestone that puts it in elite company.
Related: Is IBM stock in the dividend bargain bin?
The expected new quarterly payout is $1.6875 per share. That would represent a 0.45% increase from the current $1.68 quarterly distribution. It's a modest raise, but consistency counts for income-focused investors.
IBM last declared a dividend of $1.68 per share in January 2026. It raised that payout last April by 0.6%, moving it from $1.67.
The payout ratio of about 40% means IBM is returning a meaningful share of earnings to shareholders while still keeping enough to invest in growth.
IBM's Q1 2026 earnings report is scheduled for Wednesday, April 22. The timing makes this a pivotal week for the dividend-paying tech stock.
Wall Street is forecasting current-year revenue of $71.18 billion, with full-year normalized EPS of $12.35, up from $11.59 in the prior year.
Analysts broadly expect IBM to beat Q1 estimates, with AI, hybrid cloud, automation, and cybersecurity highlighted as the key drivers to watch in the April 22 report.
Wedbush reiterated an "outperform" rating and maintained a $340 price target on IBM, signaling strong analyst conviction that IBM's AI and hybrid-cloud strategy can drive upside.
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives has also noted he sees roughly 35% upside as enterprise customers move from AI pilots to large-scale deployments.
In recent years, IBM CEO Arvind Krishna has shifted the company's focus toward software, artificial intelligence, and hybrid cloud.
And management has guided to revenue growth exceeding 5% in 2026, along with free cash flow of approximately $15.7 billion, allowing it to raise dividend payouts and target accretive acquisitions.
IBM generated approximately$14.7 billion in free cash flow during 2025. This cash generation supports continued investment in research and development, strategic acquisitions, and shareholder returns through dividends and share repurchases.
Citigroup described IBM as an AI survivor and enabler, a characterization that reflects the broader Wall Street view that IBM has successfully navigated the AI disruption narrative rather than falling victim to it.
With earnings due April 22 and a potential dividend hike likely to follow, income investors have good reason to keep a close eye on IBM this week.
Related: IBM CEO sends blunt message on AI and quantum computing