Altria Group (NYSE:MO | MO Price Prediction), Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO), and Genuine Parts Company (NYSE:GPC) are three of the most reliable dividend payers in the market.
Each has raised its dividend for decades without interruption, earning the rare “Dividend King” title. Together, a $10,000 position in each generates roughly $1,307 in annual passive income at current prices. But what has actually happened to investors who held these stocks over the past decade?
Three Different Stories, One Common Thread
Altria is the most controversial name in the group. The tobacco giant has navigated a structural collapse in cigarette volumes, with Marlboro’s market share slipping to 40.5% and cigarette volumes declining roughly 10% annually. The NJOY ACE e-vapor product faced a regulatory ban, and illicit e-vapor competition has pressured the category. Yet Altria has compensated through relentless pricing power, share buybacks, and the growing oral nicotine pouch business. FY2025 adjusted diluted EPS grew 4.4% to $5.42, and the company guided for $5.56 to $5.72 in 2026 EPS. The dividend has been raised for 60 consecutive years.
Coca-Cola’s story is steadier. The company leaned into its asset-light franchise model, expanded Coca-Cola Zero Sugar volume by 13% in Q4 2025, and delivered 5% organic revenue growth for the full year. Currency headwinds created a 5-point EPS drag in 2025, but that pressure is expected to ease. KO has raised its dividend for 63 consecutive years and paid out $8.8 billion in dividends in 2025 alone.
Genuine Parts has had the rockiest recent run. A $741.97 million pension settlement charge crushed GAAP earnings in Q4 2025, and a First Brands bankruptcy triggered a $150.5 million credit loss. The company also announced a planned separation into two independent public companies targeting Q1 2027. GPC has raised its dividend for 70 consecutive years, the longest streak of the three.
Income Case and Key Risks for All Three
For income-focused investors whose primary goal is durable passive income and who can tolerate market underperformance on price, these three stocks offer a compelling case.
The bull case rests on decades of unbroken dividend growth, defensive consumer staples positioning, and yields that beat most fixed-income alternatives. Altria yields roughly 6.61%, Coca-Cola roughly 2.8%, and Genuine Parts roughly 3.73%. That blended income stream of approximately $1,307 annually on a $30,000 combined position is real and reliable.
The bear case is equally clear.
All three have lagged the S&P 500 badly over a decade on price. GPC carries the most near-term risk: elevated leverage near 4x, an S&P credit downgrade, and a complex separation process that could distract management through 2027.
If the planned split stalls or destroys value, GPC’s dividend streak could face pressure. GPC’s near-term risk profile is elevated relative to the other two until the separation story becomes clearer. Altria and Coca-Cola present a cleaner income profile for investors who understand that these names have historically delivered slower price appreciation in exchange for steady cash.