The Best TSX Stocks Right Now for Income and Growth Combined

Buy Enbridge (TSX:ENB) and another stock for income and appreciation this year.

| More on:
Key Points
  • Look for Canadian dividend stocks that balance solid yields with real growth, since that mix can support steady dividend increases over time.
  • Enbridge and Restaurant Brands fit that approach, with Enbridge looking attractive after a pullback and Restaurant Brands gaining momentum while still offering a meaningful dividend.

Canadian investors have plenty of options when it comes to above-average yielders that still have upbeat growth prospects. Of course, if you crank up the dividend yield, the potential for growth and capital gains tends to take things a few notches down. Instead of looking to max out a yield of capital-appreciation potential, I believe that finding the right balance is a smart move for investors who want the best of both worlds.

What’s better, though, is that the stocks with the right mix of growth and dividends also happen to be best equipped to grow their dividends. So, maxing out dividend-growth potential instead of income or appreciation may very well be the underrated move that Canadian investors should consider as a part of their overall strategy. At the end of the day, you don’t need to be an income investor, a growth investor, or a value-minded investor.

Arguably, you can and probably should aim to be all three, as they don’t have to be mutually exclusive. Sometimes the best rewards are with the value names that have generous dividends and strong (but often underrated) earnings growth trajectories. In this piece, we’ll have a look at two names that I think fit the bill.

dividend growth for passive income

Source: Getty Images

Enbridge

No list of premier large-cap Canadian dividend growers is complete without pipeline top dog Enbridge (TSX:ENB), which has been a dependable source of income through all sorts of “weather” conditions the industry has been through over the decades.

In a prior piece, I highlighted the recent energy-related dip as an opportunity to give the midstream players a second look, given they’re not really all that dependent on oil prices being above a certain level. Whether oil rockets higher again, perhaps past the US$115 per-barrel mark, or plunges below US$80, Enbridge is positioned to keep the dividend raises coming as cash flows continue to swell. For investors, it’s less about where oil’s hovering and more about how smooth things are going operationally.

In any case, the shares have only continued to march lower despite the robust fundamentals, gas transmission tailwinds, and more big catalysts in store for 2027.

As a utility-like dividend play on steroids, I think most dividend growth investors could do very well by hanging onto the name and adding to dips. After another 1% drop on Monday, shares are down 6% from their peak. I think the punishment across the energy sector has now been overdone, especially when it comes to the premier energy transportation plays.

Restaurant Brands International

Restaurant Brands International (TSX:QSR) stock is another rewarding dividend grower that’s also poised to reward long-term investors with nice gains. The stock is in the midst of a hot run, now up 14% in three months, thanks in part to some impressive quarters.

With a 3.36% dividend yield, plenty of growth catalysts ahead, and a picture-perfect breakout setup, I wouldn’t sleep on the name, especially as the firm looks to opportunistically invest in innovation technologies that can help further enhance efficiencies behind the scenes.

Now, QSR stock isn’t known to be a big gainer, but given the huge improvements made (better food, nicer restaurants, and reasonable prices) and the runway to sprint down, I see no reason to take profits in what could be one of Canada’s next best dividend-growth heroes.

Fool contributor Joey Frenette has positions in Restaurant Brands International. The Motley Fool recommends Enbridge and Restaurant Brands International. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Dividend Stocks

young people dance to exercise
Dividend Stocks

30-Year-Olds: Stop What You’re Doing and Start Your TFSA Catch up

A lot of Canadians in their 30s have plenty of TFSA room left, and a small-cap like Rubellite is the…

Read more »

A worker drinks out of a mug in an office.
Dividend Stocks

1 Incredible TSX Dividend Stock to Buy While It’s Down 50%

This unloved stock could bounce in the coming weeks.

Read more »

senior man and woman stretch their legs on yoga mats outside
Dividend Stocks

A Canadian Dividend Stock Down 35% to Buy and Hold for Retirement

Stantec stock has fallen 34% from its high. Here's why this fast-growing Canadian dividend payer looks like a buy-and-hold for…

Read more »

three friends eat pizza
Dividend Stocks

How Much Should a 20-Year-Old Canadian Have in Their TFSA to Retire?

Starting early and aiming to max TFSA contributions to allow for decades of tax‑free compounding matter more than any specific…

Read more »

Printing canadian dollar bills on a print machine
Dividend Stocks

How to Turn a $14,000 TFSA Into a Cash Generating Machine

Two blue chip pipeline stocks quietly pay you to do nothing. Here is the simple math that TFSA investors should…

Read more »

chart reflected in eyeglass lenses
Top TSX Stocks

5 Cheap Canadian Stocks to Buy Before the Market Notices

Explore five cheap Canadian stocks that remain overlooked and may offer strong long‑term upside as fundamentals improve.

Read more »

Nuclear power station cooling tower
Dividend Stocks

1 Magnificent TSX Dividend Stock Down 20% to Buy and Hold For Decades

This infrastructure builder just posted record numbers, yet the market is treating it like an afterthought.

Read more »

dividends grow over time
Dividend Stocks

1 Dividend Stock That’s Been Quietly, But Constantly, Raising Its Dividend

Chemtrade’s monthly distribution has been climbing, and its cash-flow coverage suggests the payout isn’t just a headline.

Read more »