Bookmark and Share
Showing posts with label CVRR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CVRR. Show all posts

These 15 Low Leveraged Dividend Stocks Paying Yields Over 10%

If you want to get a high dividend, not a large of 5 percent or more, I'm talking about yields far over 10% yearly, you need to take big risks. 

Normally, a 10% or more yields is normally a tell-tale sign that a dividend payout is unsustainable. A stock that has a dividend yield in the double digits can be incredibly tempting to an investor. The problem with dividend stocks is that so many of those high yields are eventually cut because the businesses can't continue to support the payout. 

That isn't always the case, though. Some companies have monstrously high yields that aren't at much risk of being cut. Attached I've tried to compile a few stocks with a double-digit yields that have fundamental strength to keep paying its investors. 

On the market are 276 companies with a current dividend yield over 10%. Mostly high leveraged companies from the energy and real estate sector are under them.

I've put my eyes on those stocks with a market cap over 2 billion and a debt to equity under 1. Exactly 15 companies have such a good ratio.

Here are the results…

20 Cheap Stocks With The Highest Yields On The Market

In the seven years since the Federal Reserve slashed interest rates virtually to zero, investors have struggled to find income amid a low-yield landscape. 

That's why stocks with high dividend yields are particularly appealing right now to income investors and savers -- double-digit yields, even more so. 

Recently I wrote about the highest yielding stocks on the market with a buy or better rating. The yields from the results were all over 8 percent.

Today I like to share those stocks with you that offer the cheapest P/E, price-to-earnings ratios while having the highest yields on the market.

I've also include those stocks with a 2+ billion market capitalization. Limited Partnerships, Oil drillers, REITs and Telecoms are mostly higher yielding stocks, giving investors a large share of its annual profits back via dividends.

Here are the results...

7 Mispriced And Dividend Paying Stocks Each Investor Should Know

Buying a stock is easy but you will have only a chance to make money with your investment when you look at the valuation and growth perspectives of the corporate.

If you invest into undervalued stocks, you will more likely have a higher return in the future. Today I like to discuss a few stocks that seem to be undervalued in terms of price to earnings and growth. Please leave comments in the box at the end of the article if you agree with me or disagree.

Here are the results...

14 Stocks With Dividend Yields Over 10% And An Expected Single P/E

It seems that every story you read about these days is geared toward day traders or those looking for long-term growth in retirement portfolios. But there are millions of investors who need or want current income, and low interest rates have made that strategy largely a losing one. Some of us developed to yield seekers, looking for cheap and high yielding stocks
.
I’m not talking about a yield income of 1 or 2 percent yearly. No, that’s boring. I’m talking about a 2.5 percent yield per quarter or a sum of 10% or more per year.

Attached you can find a selection of stocks with yields over 10 percent. The valuation of the selected stocks is cheap with a forward P/E of less than 10.

Most of the 14 results are off mainstream: Asset Managers, Oil & Gas Refining & Marketing, REITs and finally Telecoms are the main groups that pay those big dividends while having a cheap valuation.
Are they cheap for a reason or a bargain?

The market is always looking forward, so that fact that those stocks are trading below their book value suggests investors expect the companies to underperform. While there are several reasons why this is could be the case, one of the most apparent is tighter spreads.

Here are the results in detail....

Oil Refinery Dividend Stock Investing - These Portfolio Generated 12.26% Yearly

Oil dropped to just over $40 per barrel, and oil stocks have taken a hit. If you're worried that oil will stay at a low price, then refiners are a good investment.

They do very well when the price of crude is low. Low prices means they can refine more oil, so, apart from the initial hit on inventory, future profit opportunities are strong. People also tend to buy more gas when oil is low, so there's more demand for the refineries.

My latest research focus was the Asset Management, Industrial and finally the Energy Sector.

Within the Energy sector, companies from the downstream segment like Oil refinery stocks look attractive for me. They do not depend highly on the oil price, more on the cracking margin.

The business of the refining players is negatively correlated with crude prices. This is because the companies use oil as an input from which they derive refined petroleum products like gasoline – the prime transportation fuel in the U.S. Hence, lower the oil price, higher will be their profits.



We can say that the decline in crude price, which is expected to continue for some time, will bring more good news for the firms engaged in refining oil.

This means not that downstream companies are better when the oil price slumps. My research result of the past decade was that they also lose value and they are highly volatile. 

In 2008, the year of the financial crisis, the portfolio of the best refinery dividend paying oil stocks lost more than half of its value. After the sell-off, it tripled its value.

Attached is a list of 12 dividend paying oil refinery stocks that gave investors a great past return. Over the last decade, those stocks delivered a 12.26% average yearly return.

The biggest threat is in my view the possibility of a political change in the energy sector. Do politicians want more renewable energy production or put they more money into jobs and growth via the old systems.

Energy is definitely the most important sector that benefits when growth should be created for the economy.

These are the best dividend picks from the Oil Refinery Industry...

12 Higher Capitalized Stocks With Yields Over 10% You Might Like...

Puhhh...this interest environment is boring. You need a huge amount of money to receive a low yield. That's crazy but you can Thank Ben Bernanke and the current Fed Chairman Janet Yellen.

Most people don't know it but there are still high yields and stocks that pay double digit dividend yields on your investment. For sure those companies are more risky but you get also compensated by higher cash returns.

Attached is a small list of all mid and large capitalized stocks that offer currently a double-digit dividend yield or a yield over 10 percent yearly. 

Most of the stocks also have a low valuation by forward price to earnings. Nearly all of the results come from the financial and basic material sector.

These are the three companies with a buy or better rating in detail....

12 Stocks With Dividend Yields Over 10% And Low Forward P/E’s

Cheaply valuated shares with very high dividend yields originally published at long-term-investments.blogspot.com. Today I would like to show you some of the highest yielding stocks on the market with low earnings multiples. I choose stocks with a dividend yield of more than 10% with a forward P/E of less than 15. In order to eliminate the lower capitalized companies who have definitely a higher risk, I need to look at companies with a market cap over $2 billion.

Only twelve shares on the market met these restrictions. I believe that a high dividend yield will help investors to get a quick cash return and should boost the passive income but it’s also very dangerous to buy those stocks. Most of the high yielders come from the Financial or REIT sector. Most of them are highly loaded with debt and they are no long-term dividend growers like Procter and Coca Cola.


Six of the twelve results have a current buy or better rating. The yields are between 11.38 percent and 20.32 percent.


5 Latest Dividend Stock Purchases From Carl Icahn And His Full Portfolio

Carl Icahn’s asset allocation strategy orignially published at long-term-investments.blogspot.com. Some of you might have heard about Carl Icahn, the Jewish investor. Icahn manages around $21.5 billion in his asset management vehicle Ichan Capital Management.

Within the past, Icahn had proved a very good taste in investing. With only 19 shares, he is also a much undiversified guy and focused on stocks he really knows. In the past I’ve described his latest Q1 stock purchases.

Today, I would like to show you the latest stock moves from Carl Icahn of the second quarter. 

In Q2, Carl hit the button for 16 trades and purchased only seven stocks of which one was a completely new stake in his portfolio. Five of his stock acquisitions pay dividends. You can find a detailed list about these stocks below. The biggest moves were reasonable to Dell, CVR Refining as well as Nuance Communications.

Icahn loves cheap stocks and he is also a noisy guy like most of the activists. The average forward P/E of his latest acquisitions is only at 13.83 and earnings are expected to grow by 10.32 percent for the next five years.

16 High Yielding Dividend Stocks With Singe P/E Ratios

High yielding Mid- and Large capitalized dividend stocks with cheap price ratios originally published at long-term-investments.blogspot.com. I often write about stocks with cheap fundamentals, mostly about those with a low forward P/E. I believe that this is a great first step to find good bargains at the stock market.

But you need also a good initial dividend yield if you like to build a passive dividend income to live off.

Today I would like to create a screen which combines both, yield and cheapness at a very high level.

I’m looking for High-Yield dividend stocks with single-digit P/E ratios. In order to limit my screening results, I observed only higher capitalized companies with a market capitalization over USD 2 billion.

Sixteen stocks fulfilled my criteria. Seven of them have a current buy or better rating and fifteen yielding over 10 percent! 

REITs, asset managers and communication stocks are dominating the screen. That’s where you can find the highest dividend yields but the risk is also much higher.