5 Canadian Stocks Built for Buy-and-Hold Investors

These TSX dividend stars have the balance sheet strength to ride out market turbulence.

| More on:

Canadian investors are searching for good TSX stocks to buy for their self-directed Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) and Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) portfolio focused on dividends and total returns.

In the current market conditions, where tariff uncertainty and rising oil prices threaten the economy, it makes sense to look for companies that are market leaders and have solid balance sheets to ride out turbulence while maintaining dividends.

woman considering the future

Source: Getty Images

Royal Bank of Canada

Royal Bank (TSX:RY) is Canada’s largest financial institution with a current market capitalization of close to $310 billion.

The bank has strong domestic and global operations across several pillars, including commercial and retail banking, capital markets, wealth management, investor and treasury services, and insurance. Royal Bank is very profitable, consistently delivering return on equity numbers that are the envy of most global peers.

A strong balance sheet gives Royal Bank the ability to ride out recessions while also providing the flexibility to take advantage of acquisition opportunities that might surface during challenging market conditions.

At the time of writing, the stock provides a dividend yield of 3%.

Canadian National Railway

Canadian National Railway (TSX:CNR) has been under pressure for the past two years. Labour strikes and wildfires disrupted operations in 2024, while tariff uncertainty in 2025 forced management to walk back guidance. Soaring oil prices, recession risks, and ongoing trade negotiations between Canada, the U.S., and Mexico will be ongoing headwinds in 2026.

Near-term volatility should be expected, but contrarian investors can take advantage of the current conditions to add CN to their portfolios while it is out of favour. The company remains very profitable and is using excess cash to buy back shares. CN has increased its dividend annually for the past 30 years.

Fortis

Fortis (TSX:FTS) is another dividend-growth star. The board raised the distribution in each of the past 52 years. Fortis is working on a $28.8 billion capital program that will boost the rate base by an average rate of 7% per year through 2030. As the new assets are completed and go into service, the jump in cash flow should support planned annual dividend increases of 4% to 6% over the next five years.

Canadian Natural Resources

Canadian Natural Resources (TSX:CNQ) is a major player in the Canadian energy patch with production assets that include oil sands, conventional heavy and light oil, offshore oil, natural gas liquids, and natural gas.

The company is adept at moving capital around the asset portfolio to maximize returns. CNRL also has the balance sheet strength to make large strategic acquisitions to boost production and reserves. The board has increased the dividend annually for the past 25 years. Rising demand for Canadian energy and the potential expansion of pipeline capacity in Canada should help drive revenue growth.

Enbridge

Enbridge (TSX:ENB) is another dividend-growth stock to consider for a buy-and-hold portfolio. The company raised the distribution in each of the past 30 years and should extend the streak over the medium term, supported by a $39 billion capital program and contributions from acquisitions. The stock just hit a new record high, but investors who buy ENB at the current price can still get a 5% dividend yield.

The bottom line

These five Canadian companies have the balance sheet strength to ride out market turbulence and should be solid buy-and-hold picks for a diversified portfolio focused on dividends and long-term total returns.

The Motley Fool recommends Canadian National Railway, Canadian Natural Resources, Enbridge, and Fortis. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Fool contributor Andrew Walker has no position in any stock mentioned.

More on Dividend Stocks

Couple working on laptops at home and fist bumping
Dividend Stocks

2 Dividend Stocks to Buy Today and Feel Good Holding for at Least 5 Years

Given their strong fundamentals, a proven track record of consistent payouts, and solid growth prospects, these two dividend stocks offer…

Read more »

top TSX stocks to buy
Dividend Stocks

1 Canadian Dividend Stock I’d Buy Before Inflation Heats Up Again

This TSX ETF pays monthly income and could rebound when inflation heats up.

Read more »

Hourglass projecting a dollar sign as shadow
Dividend Stocks

This 6.5% Dividend Play Sends a Cheque Like Clockwork

This TSX dividend stock has consistently paid dividends supported by steady cash flow growth, enabling it to send a cheque…

Read more »

A worker gives a business presentation.
Dividend Stocks

The Bank of Canada Held Rates: Here Are 3 Stocks to Watch

With the Bank of Canada on pause, these three TSX stocks stand out for income, essential demand, and hard-asset cash…

Read more »

crisis concept, falling stairs
Dividend Stocks

1 Magnificent Canadian Dividend Stock Down 13.9% to Buy and Hold for Decades

Given its solid first-quarter performance, encouraging growth outlook, and discounted stock price, Magna International would be an excellent buy for…

Read more »

boy in bowtie and glasses gives positive thumbs up
Dividend Stocks

2 Canadian Blue-Chip Stocks I’d Buy Before the Next Rally

Two TSX blue chips could be well-positioned before the next rally, one riding nuclear momentum, the other compounding quietly in…

Read more »

dividends grow over time
Dividend Stocks

2 Dividend Stocks to Hold for the Next 20 Years

Both dividend stocks are supported by durable businesses and have the ability to continue increasing earnings and dividends over time.

Read more »

trading chart of brent crude oil prices
Dividend Stocks

Oil, Rates, and Trade: 3 TSX Stocks That Could Come Out Ahead

When oil, rates, and trade headlines collide, these three TSX names stand out for demand tied to energy and energy…

Read more »