Capital Group Dividend Growers ETF

CGDG · AMEX

Market closed$37.84$-0.170000 (-0.45%)After hours $37.84 · 0.00%

Key statistics

Previous close$38.01
Open$37.85
Day high$38.08
Day low$37.77
52-week high$38.25
52-week low$32.90
Market cap5.16B
Volume455.94K
Average volume628.42K
P/E ratio20.35
Forward P/E
EPS1.86
Dividend yield0.00%

Market context

Why it moved

CGDG edged slightly lower amid light selling pressure and thin trading activity, with no major company-specific catalysts identified to drive a more decisive move in either direction.

What is happening

Recent company-specific developments and publisher coverage.

July 17, 2026Capital Group Dividend Growers ETF edged modestly lower as broader equity markets turned risk-off, with the S&P 500 declining amid growing concerns over AI spending sustainability and escalating U.S.-Iran military tensions disrupting Strait of Hormuz shipping lanes. The ETF's diversified holdings in quality dividend growers — including top positions in TSMC, Philip Morris, AbbVie, Welltower, and RTX — provided mixed signals: TSMC fell after record Q2 earnings as investors worried about surging capital expenditures, while Philip Morris rose sharply on strong smoke-free product growth ahead of its July 22 earnings report, and AbbVie gained on bullish analyst sentiment ahead of its July 31 results.

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July 17, 2026Capital Group Dividend Growers ETF edged up modestly, closing near its 52-week high, even as broader markets slipped on renewed AI stock selling pressure. The fund's defensive tilt—anchored by dividend growers like Philip Morris International (+3.4% on the day following raised full-year guidance), Welltower (+3.5% on strong NOI results), and AbbVie—provided ballast against tech-driven volatility. Top holding Broadcom also benefited from positive sentiment around its $30B Apple chip deal, while TSMC's record Q2 earnings reinforced AI infrastructure demand despite its U.S.-listed shares facing valuation-driven selling.

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July 15, 2026Capital Group Dividend Growers ETF edged up modestly, with top holdings providing mixed but broadly supportive narratives. Philip Morris International — the fund's third-largest holding at 3.7% — traded lower ahead of its July 22 earnings webcast, though analysts maintain a Moderate Buy consensus with a $194.62 target. Welltower (2.2%) and RTX (1.5%) showed resilience, each backed by strong Q1 beats and constructive analyst sentiment. The broader macro backdrop proved supportive: a cooler-than-expected June CPI reading (3.5% vs. 3.8% expected) bolstered the case for dividend-oriented equities, while the XLF financial sector ETF touched a 52-week high, reinforcing the fund's defensive income positioning amid ongoing geopolitical uncertainty around the Strait of Hormuz.

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July 15, 2026Capital Group Dividend Growers ETF closed essentially unchanged amid a volatile macro backdrop dominated by cooler-than-expected June CPI data (headline inflation falling to 3.5%) and renewed US-Iran geopolitical tensions that sent oil prices sharply higher. The fund's diversified, dividend-growth portfolio — with top holdings including Broadcom (AVGO, surging ~11% on AI demand), TSMC (TSM, reporting record June revenue up 67.9% YoY), Philip Morris (PM, edging lower), Welltower (WELL, rising ~1.2%), and RTX (trading up modestly) — saw mixed underlying performance, with defensive and income-oriented names providing ballast against the broader market's volatility.

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July 13, 2026Capital Group Dividend Growers ETF closed modestly lower as broad market weakness weighed on equities, with the S&P 500 retreating amid escalating U.S.-Iran tensions that sent oil prices surging over 4-5%. The fund's diversified dividend-growth holdings — including top positions in Broadcom, TSMC, Philip Morris, AstraZeneca, Welltower, and RTX — faced a mixed backdrop: energy and defense names benefited from geopolitical tailwinds, while chip stocks pulled back sharply following a semiconductor selloff in Asian markets. Investors are also positioning ahead of a pivotal earnings week featuring major banks, TSMC, and key U.S. inflation data, all of which could reset expectations for Fed policy and equity valuations.

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July 9, 2026Capital Group Dividend Growers ETF closed essentially unchanged, holding steady near $37.79 as several key holdings faced headwinds. AstraZeneca (AZN.L), a top holding at 2.6% of the portfolio, saw its shares plunge roughly 9% after its Wainua heart drug failed a Phase III trial, wiping out over £20 billion in market cap. Meanwhile, geopolitical turbulence continued to dominate the macro backdrop, with fresh U.S.-Iran strikes rattling markets and pushing oil prices higher, reigniting inflation fears and lifting Treasury yields — conditions that typically weigh on dividend-growth equities through multiple compression. Defensive positioning helped the fund weather the turbulence, as tobacco holdings Philip Morris (PM, 3.9%) and British American Tobacco (BATS, 1.9%) remained broadly supported, and Welltower (WELL, 2.2%) traded near its 52-week high on strong institutional demand.

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July 9, 2026Capital Group Dividend Growers ETF edged down modestly as broad market risk-off sentiment weighed on equities following President Trump's declaration that the U.S.-Iran ceasefire was 'over,' sending oil prices surging over 5% and stoking inflation fears ahead of Federal Reserve minutes. The fund's diversified portfolio of dividend-growing companies — including top holdings TSMC, Broadcom, Philip Morris, AstraZeneca, Welltower, RTX, and AbbVie — faced mixed cross-currents, with defense names like RTX benefiting from geopolitical tailwinds while travel-sensitive and consumer-facing holdings faced pressure from the oil spike and risk-off rotation. Dividend-oriented strategies drew renewed investor interest as markets turned defensive, offering relative stability compared to growth-heavy peers.

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July 7, 2026Capital Group Dividend Growers ETF closed essentially flat, holding near its 52-week high as its diversified portfolio of quality dividend growers provided relative stability amid a choppy session on Wall Street. The broader market saw the S&P 500 and Nasdaq dip as Samsung's blowout earnings triggered a 'sell the news' reaction across chip stocks, weighing on top CGDG holdings like TSMC and Broadcom. Offsetting some of that pressure, defensive names in the fund—including Philip Morris International, AbbVie, and RTX—offered support, with PM benefiting from strong institutional buying and RTX lifted by fresh NATO defense contract momentum.

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