S&P Europe 350 Dividend Aristocrats

The S&P Europe 350 Dividend Aristocrats is the European equivalent of the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats. It is a stock index of European constituents that have followed a policy of consistently increasing dividends every year for at least 10 consecutive years.[1] The index was launched on May 2, 2005. It is a subset of the S&P Europe 350. ETFs exist for the set of constituents. The constituents of the index are determined by rules set forth by Standard & Poor's.

Companies that meet the criteria for being a constituent of the S&P Europe 350 Dividend Aristocrats

TickerNameRegistered
office
Industry
ABEAbertis SpainConglomerate
ABFAssociated British Foods United KingdomFood industry
AHTAshtead Group United KingdomEquipment rental
BABAE Systems United Kingdom Aerospace, Arms industry, Information security
BATSBritish American Tobacco United KingdomTobacco industry
BNZLBunzl United Kingdom Distribution and outsourcing
CPICapita United KingdomBusiness process outsourcing and professional services
COLO-BColoplast DenmarkHealthcare
CPGCompass Group United KingdomConglomerate
DGEDiageo United KingdomBeverages
EIEssilor FranceMedical equipment
ENGEnagás Spain Gas utilities
FMEFresenius Medical Care GermanyHealthcare
FRE Fresenius GermanyHealthcare
GBLBGroupe Bruxelles Lambert BelgiumHolding company
IMBImperial Brands United KingdomTobacco
ITRKIntertek United KingdomProduct testing
JMATJohnson Matthey United KingdomChemicals
KRZKerry Group IrelandFood company
LISPChocoladefabriken Lindt & Sprüngli  SwitzerlandConfectionery
LUXLuxottica ItalyEyewear
NESNNestlé  SwitzerlandFood processing
NOVNNovartis  SwitzerlandPharmaceuticals
NOVO-BNovo Nordisk DenmarkPharmaceuticals
NZYM-BNovozymes DenmarkBiotechnology
NXTNext plc United KingdomRetail
ORL'Oreal FrancePersonal care
PPBPaddy Power Betfair IrelandBookmaking
PRU Prudential United KingdomFinancial services
ROGRoche Holding AG  SwitzerlandPharmaceuticals
REE Red Eléctrica Spain Electric utilities
RMSHermès FranceLuxury goods
SANSanofi FrancePharmaceuticals
SESG SES FranceTelecommunications
SGESage Group United KingdomSoftware
SSEScottish & Southern Energy United KingdomEnergy
UCB UCB BelgiumPharmaceuticals
UNAUnilever NetherlandsConsumer goods
WKLWolters Kluwer NetherlandsPublishing
WPPWPP Group United KingdomAdvertising
WTBWhitbread United KingdomLeisure
gollark: Columns are declared in order *too*, but that really shouldn't be relied in like the python API does.
gollark: In SQLite they do actually, there's an INTEGER PRIMARY KEY rowid column unless you disable that explicitly.
gollark: Which is still HIGHLY dodecahedral and dependent on columns' order.
gollark: I'm not actually entirely sure, but it would involve a bunch of meddling with a "cursor", and you would have to get each column by index instead of name.
gollark: See? This is quite nice. It turns the results into a usable and non-annoying form. It uses prepared statements for efficiency.

See also

References

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