7 high-yield dividend stocks for the current market - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
Search Top Stocks:

7 high-yield dividend stocks for the current market

Posted Jun 30 2008, 07:50 AM by Douglas McIntyre
Rating:

Investors chase high dividend stocks with stable earnings when they are concerned about where to put their money.  Which dividends appear safest?

We looked for stocks with dividend yields north of 4.5% (above 10-year T-Note) as the cut-off and those who are expected to see earnings remain ample to maintain the numbers.  We had to eliminate everything tied to financial stocks in this climate as many dividends there are trimmed.  We also had to eliminate anything tied to high volatility and anything tied to auto's.  We screened many others, but here are seven stocks with dividends that we think will either stay the same or grow in the coming year.

24/7 Wall St. created a list of defensive stocks for 2008, and this is an update: 

Altria Group, Inc is one of the old defensive stocks in a defensive sector: good old investor-friendly and cancer-causing tobacco.  The company recently split off Philip Morris International unit and is in the midst of a buyback and restructuring.  This company didn't drop the dividend when the stock was butchered in the 1990's, so now that its business is stable it's a safe bet that it will try to keep its dividend no matter what.  With a $1.16 dividend (annualized) you have a 5.4% yield as of today and the $1.67 EPS estimate for 2008 and $1.84 EPS estimate for 2009 may actually leave more room for that dividend to increase rather than just stay the same.

Apartment Investment & Management Co. is one of th larger apartment-REIT's out there, and it is diversified on property scales and by geography.  REIT's also have to pay out 90% of their taxable income to shareholders in the form of dividends.  While apartments have not at all been immune from late-pays, the credit crunch, and the soft economy, the one area that sane people can't eliminate is their roof.  Unless they want to be homeless, destitute, or back with mom and dad, the public has to live somewhere.  Unfortunately that has not translated into share appreciation as this has lost more than 1/3 of its value.  Its $2.40 dividend does seem sustainable with expected FFO (equivalent to EPS) of $3.25 in 2008 and $3.41 in 2009.  Because the price has come off this much, its current dividend yield is almost 6.8%. [readmore]

AT& T and Verizon Communications are both believed to have safe and stable dividends.  Out of the two, Verizon is in the midst of a larger acquisition.  It is not expected to tie up all the cash that would have been applicable for the dividend, but this does make AT&T as the leader now that its recombination of BellSouth, SBC Communications and the old AT&T are all Ma-Bell once again.  AT&T has a $198 Billion market cap, its dividend is currently $1.60/annualized (4.60%), and forward income estimates of $3.01 EPS for 2008 and $3.38 for 2009 make the dividend more than sustainable for AT&T.

Dow Chemical Co is perhaps one of the least exciting of industries, but because it has a monster track record and it has to keep running whether the economy is good or bad (with profits) this one made the list.  The company's $1.68 dividend (annualized) generates an approximate yield of 4.6%.  The reason this has made the cut in the 4.5% yield threshold is because the stock is so far off of its recent highs.  At $35.10 (Thursday close), its shares are down from almost $48.00.  With over $3.00 in projected EPS in both 2008 and 2009, its $1.68 annualized dividend doesn't look in jeopardy.  When you consider its recent flurry of price hike announcements and a perception that the pricing power will be able to stick, that seems even more likely today.

Duke Energy Corp. is one of the top ten electric utilities in the U.S. with a market cap north of $20 Billion.  Its main operations are in the Carolinas with smaller presence in Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky; and it has some Latin American exposure as well.  The utility isn't immune from current issue, and while its debt-to-equity is lower than many it has lower valuation multiples than many peers (part because of restructuring).  But one things that utilities have historically sought is to be steady dividend payers, and they hate lowering dividends.  Earnings estimates of $1.28 EPS in 2008 and $1.35 EPS in 2009 should allow this giant electric utility to keep on paying out a $0.92 annualized dividend even if it does have to eat some higher costs that can't be entirely passed down to consumers.

Senior Housing Properties Trust has been one of the more reliable senior care facility operators and REIT compared to many peers of late.  This sector even fits within our "secular trend" sector as the elderly care facility sector has far more future demand than current and planned supply when you look at the managed elderly care facilities.  Its FFO (EPS equivalent) estimates of $1.71 for 2008 and $1.79 for 2009 should allow the company to maintain its $1.40 (annualized) dividend.  Because the company has made an acquisition and financed it with a dilutive secondary offering, we are not expecting the real earnings jump to come that would increase dividend-eligible income (90% for REIT's) until 2010 or 2011.  But the income is there to maintain its dividend and the company would likely rather sell stock or take on light debt rather than to cut its dividend to holders. This one isn't without any risk, but as it is in the middle of a longer-term range and as the company has been a stable operator of nursing homes where others haven't done as well we feel the company can maintain its high dividend.

Douglas A. McIntyre blogs for Top Stocks and its an editor at 24/7 Wall St.

Comments

 

With inflation running at close to 3% and a declining US dollar, a 4.5% dividend yield cut-off is not that high. Some finanical sector companies are paying a 8%+ yield right now, but are most likely to cut their dividends soon. I say look for oversesas companies that pay high dividends (and more potential growth). This way you mitigate a declining US dollar (see my detalied outlook here : www.savingtoinvest.com/.../us-dollar-outlook-2008-2009-and-beyond.html ) and benefit from higher and more sustainable dividends paid by foriegn companies.

Take a look at Frontline (FRO) a shipping company.  Unbelievable returns the last five years.

Take a look at ConEdison (ED) a electric utility in New York that will be making money until the end of time.

Take a look at HCN a health care REIT that pays well.

Yes, even take a look at Bank of America (BAC) which is trading at a bargain basement price now, and has not cut its dividend, giving it a yield of 10.72%.

take a look @ M & I Bank. dividend paying 8.07% & raised dividends last quarter.

He stated at the beginning to avoid financials, volatility, and sectors that are going dowhill, like automotive. I was looking at foreign banks, but still not safe enough. The only area I think they should have discussed are the Royalty Trusts. Most have great yields, but there is a huge range from high to low. Is it as simple as higher yield=higher risk, like bonds? Oh yeah, "junk" bonds are high yielding, but a fund might be safer. Maybe not.

What's wrong with Canadian Energy Trusts listed on US exchanges?  #1-Actually own products in demand--oil and gas which are setting price records.  #2-Hedge against inflation and hedge against further declines in U.S. dollar.  #3 - Monthy dividend players of 10%- to 15%.  #4 - Cash flows  should be up significantly because of record prices which can be used to pay down debt or increase distributions.  #5 - Sell covered calls to even further enhance returns.Yet, thse stocks down significantly in past few trading sessions while the price of what they own sets records with projected even fruther price increases.  Gurus--do your homework!  What's wrong with 10%++ returns with opps for increased prices and income distirbutions.

I purchased 100 shares of Frontline. Got a $275.00 dividend for 100 shares. Great, strong company.  Also, take a look at Nordic American Tankers (NAT). Strong company with very good dividend.

I would say that if you want to play dividend stocks, then buy a diversified portfolio of at least 30 stocks, which have consistently increased their dividends for more than 25 years. Also try to diversify across sectors.

dividendgrowth.blogspot.com/.../why-do-i-like-dividend-aristocrats.html

Just remember that you don't want to only be chasing dividend yield but also dividend growth.

I can tell you that MSN Money is not doing a good job on  this Dividend question.

Bulk Shipping: FRO, DSX, ESEA... 10 12, 18%

Energy: ENP, CEP, BPT... 10 to 13%

REIT- Mortgage If you don't mind the risk, eventually these stocks will bounce back but righ now the yeilds are 15% and higher.

Spread the $$$ around.  Do a little research in the sectors

I have to agree with comments on Canadian Royalty Trusts.  These happen to be gems with monthly payouts its darn hard to argue that these equities should not be regarded as stellar performers.  I have owned one for the past 4 years without missing a divdiend payout of at least 12%.  I only regret that I haven't secured more shares and diversified into others that are not in the energy sector.

i found the information very helpful. im doin a project in school called smartstocks.com which allows you to do fake on line tradding and i went from 15th place to 2nd in a day.

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):