Key Takeaways:
- Campbell's dividend yield jumped to 7% after forced index selling drove the stock lower
- Pool Corp has raised its dividend for 22 consecutive years at a 17% annual rate
- Both stocks were removed from the S&P 500 on June 22 in a tech-driven rebalancing
When a stock is ejected from the S&P 500, every index-tracking fund must sell it, creating artificial selling pressure unrelated to business fundamentals. On June 22, S&P Dow Jones Indices removed two companies — Campbell's Co. and Pool Corp. — replacing them with semiconductor and electronics names. For dividend investors willing to look past the mechanical churn, both stocks now offer distinct income opportunities at discounted prices.
"Index removals create a short window of forced selling that has nothing to do with the underlying business," Priya Mehta, an equity market structure analyst, said. "Patient investors can exploit that dislocation."
Campbell's carries a dividend yield above 7 percent, among the highest in consumer staples. The stock has been under pressure for more than a year as weaker volumes, costs from its 2024 Sovos Brands acquisition, and an ERP system conversion created operational headwinds. The dividend itself has run for 51 consecutive years, with a payout ratio of roughly 76 percent of earnings. Cash-flow coverage is healthier. The company's Rao's brand crossed $1 billion in trailing-12-month net sales, and in May, Campbell's acquired a 49 percent stake in La Regina, the Italian producer behind the sauces. The caveat: dividend growth has been barely 1.26 percent over five years, making this a high-yield, low-growth income story.
Pool Corp. offers a more modest 2.4 percent yield but a stronger growth trajectory. The company has raised its dividend every year for 22 consecutive years, with the payout growing at roughly 17 percent per year over the past decade. The business distributes pool supplies, equipment, and chemicals to wholesale buyers and contractors, with about 60 percent of revenue coming from maintenance and repair — demand that persists regardless of housing market conditions. First-quarter 2026 net sales rose 6 percent, with operating income up 7 percent. The company's proprietary digital platform, Pool360, now accounts for 13 percent of net sales and is growing. The risk: Pool Corp. is tied to housing market activity and consumer confidence in a way Campbell's is not.
Both stocks were pushed out by mechanical index rebalancing, not deteriorating businesses. Campbell's offers an income-heavy position at a rare yield for a consumer staples name, with Rao's as a long-term growth driver. Pool Corp. is the dividend growth story — a company that has earned its raises over 22 years and has the business model to keep earning them. Neither is a sure thing, but both deserve a look that goes beyond what the index removal implies. Investors will watch Campbell's next quarterly report for signs that its ERP headwinds are easing and Pool Corp.'s summer selling season for confirmation that discretionary spending is recovering.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.