Sometimes high dividends can be transient as the business may not be able to support it long term. In compiling this list, we have also considered the safety of the dividend and this is indicated by a high dividend coverage ratio.
These companies have also grown their dividends at a nice clip over the last 5 years which shows their commitment to dividend payments and shareholder returns.
While nothing is certain, this is a great list to start with and conduct further research in each of these stocks to figure out if they are good investments for your portfolio or not.
Attached you can find a list of stocks that might look attractive now. Each of the resutls pay a dividend over 3 percent yerly and have a low price-to-earnings ratio. Dividends grew by more than 10 percent over the past 5 years and those payments are coverd more than two times.
The value focus on the market moves more to Energy, Commodity and Energy related engineering stocks.
In addition, there are also a few retailing stocks that look cheap. Macy's, Kohls, GameStop, Wal-Mart, BestBuy, Bed Bath & Beyond are a few examples.
They could also be cheap for a reason: Online retailers like Amazon or ebay gaining more and more market share.
However, back to the results. Here are the 12 best results for value investors who look for dividend income.
12 High-Yielding And Fairly Priced Dividend Stocks are...
Analysts Saying These 30 Stocks Have The Biggest Upside Potential - Dividend Growth Stocks At Strong Buy Rating
There is one rule that investors need to keep in mind. The higher the projected return on an investment generally means that there is a lot more risk.
That is certainly true of the latest pack of analyst upside calls for massive upside. Some of these are beaten down stocks, some are very risky companies with uncertain futures, and some could easily end up in the “what ever happened to that company?” category.
Conservative investors and those who are averse to risk should not even remotely consider investing in speculative companies just because some Wall Street analyst says there is upside.
It is undeniable that many analyst calls do prove to be wrong. And many companies just never grow into their full potential. Now that you have been reminded that these are full of much more risk than you might expect from a Dow or S&P 500 stock, these are six of the last week’s analyst upgrades and positive research calls with massive upside.
Below you can get a quick overview of those stocks with the highest upside potential right now. Each of the attached listed dividend growth stocks has a strong buy rating.
Here are the results...
That is certainly true of the latest pack of analyst upside calls for massive upside. Some of these are beaten down stocks, some are very risky companies with uncertain futures, and some could easily end up in the “what ever happened to that company?” category.
Conservative investors and those who are averse to risk should not even remotely consider investing in speculative companies just because some Wall Street analyst says there is upside.
It is undeniable that many analyst calls do prove to be wrong. And many companies just never grow into their full potential. Now that you have been reminded that these are full of much more risk than you might expect from a Dow or S&P 500 stock, these are six of the last week’s analyst upgrades and positive research calls with massive upside.
Below you can get a quick overview of those stocks with the highest upside potential right now. Each of the attached listed dividend growth stocks has a strong buy rating.
Here are the results...
13 Dividend Income Stocks On Which Dividend Re-Investing Works (Value At Deep Discounts)
My personal
portfolio goal is to create an income stream from dividends paid out by low
risk, financially strong (high-quality) companies. Reinvesting your portfolio
income is also an essential part for your financial freedom.
Reinvesting
your dividends received from high-quality dividend growth stocks is a great,
relatively conservative and proven way to build wealth over the long term.
This is
especially true and appropriate for investors in the accumulation phase that
are planning for future retirement. Accumulating additional shares of dividend
growth stocks can, and will, provide an increasing and eventually larger stream
of income available at retirement when income is needed most.
Attached
you can find a list of stocks that might be interesting for long-term investors
who like to reinvest their dividends in their portfolio while looking at
raising dividends.
My main
focus was on valuation. If you buy a stock at a moderate valuation, your
initial yield should help you to get a solid starting yield.
Every stock
on the attached list has a dividend yield of more than 3 percent.
Debt-to-equity ratio is under 1, EPS growth for the next five years over 5% and
the forward P/E under 15
As a
result, 13 stocks remained on my screen. Some of them might also be
interesting. It's a first step for further research but good to find value
stocks with a decent income as inflation hedge.
Here are 13 top
stocks for re-investing...
The Safest UK Dividend Stocks With Yields Over 4%
If you like to diversify your
portfolio, you should look at stocks abroad. The United Kingdom is a great
domicile for income orientated investors.
I've often written
about foreign high yielding dividend stocks. But you must keep an eye of the
additional currency risk of your investment.
Attached you can
find a visual list of more or less safe high yielding stocks from the FTSE 100.
It's in my view a great overview.
Here are the safest dividend stocks from the UK...
Here are the safest dividend stocks from the UK...
38 Dividend Growth Utilities With A Solid Finance Basis Or Earnings Growth
If there is one thing every
investor can appreciate, it is a growing stream of reliable dividends. With the
Federal Reserve aiming to raise rates in December, the rate sensitive stocks
have seen some price declines.
One of those rate
sensitive sectors is the utility sector. To help investors find some of the
best companies in the sector, I began researching those utility stocks with at
least 5 straight years of dividend increases. 54 companies are part of the
results. That's a huge number which I want to reduce by implementing higher
restrictions. More about this method can be read below.
Some investors
like to build their dividend growth portfolio with very different strategies.
One trick that I have found can help investors stay on track is to mentally
consider the costs they will need to pay each month of their life and to set a
goal for covering those costs with dividend income.
There is a
beautiful irony in being able to cover the costs an investor faces in their
life with a dividend check from the same company that is selling them a
product. When it comes to the utility companies, it makes sense to have a more
diversified portfolio rather than simply owning the utility that covers the
investor's primary residence.
The simple
geographic risk of a natural disaster impacting the company and the investor's
life at the same time makes it ideal to use a portfolio with at least a few
different utility companies, even when the investor wants to use a utility
dividend check to pay for their cost.
Utilities are mostly not diversified but you can do it on your own by investing smaller amounts into several sub-industries.
I've created two charts from my dividend growth utility database. The first table lists all utilities with a debt-to-equity ratio below one. I think its also important to have a look at financial ratios, especially when rates go up in the near future.
The second chart
gives an overview of dividend growth utilities with a predicted 5% earnings growth
for the next five years. It's a more bullish view on future earnings.
Here are the
results…
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