Great Dividend Stocks For Retirement

What do we want? Income! When do we want it? Now! And quarterly, on a perpetual, tax-advantaged basis, please. You can find a surprising number of high-yielding stocks out there. Plenty sport double-digit yields, even. And it can be tempting to buy in.

Unfortunately, most of these are going to be in the too-good-to-be-true category (dividends about to be cut, distressed or highly leveraged companies, or one-time payouts that make the yield look larger than it normally is). But say you’ve done some investigating and found a few high-yielders that look tempting. Maybe you have looked through a firm’s most recent 10-year history of dividend payments and found that it has a great track record in this regard.

But that might not be enough history. It has been nearly 10 years since the last recession. The real question is, what will happen during the next downturn? Even if you go back further, well--that was then, and this is now. We can be pretty certain about the past, but it is no guarantee of future results, like it says in the fine print.

Can you protect yourself against dividend income collapse? We think so. We have a few words of advice--and some investment ideas to get you started.

1. Diversify, diversify, diversify--by sector. Certain business sectors lend themselves more to paying dividends or distributions than others, so you won’t be able to diversify entirely if you’re looking for income. (Income generation in retirement is a favorite topic of ours.) But there’s more to income generation than the usual suspects like oil companies, utilities, and real estate investment trusts.

2. Don’t stop at dividend yield. Look at dividend growth as well. You’ll add not just diversification but the potential for stronger growth in your portfolio’s yield over time. Firms like Starbucks and Microsoft (which you’ll see on the list below) are great examples. These are companies that have been around for decades and are household names, but somewhat new to making dividend distributions. Even so, they are increasing their distributions at a pretty fast clip. With high-revenue-growth years mostly behind them, they’re paying out a higher percentage of free cash flow to shareholders instead of plowing it back into the business. These investments will lower your portfolio’s overall yield on a percentage basis, but they should make up for it with dividend growth.

3. Don’t let your portfolio become unbalanced. Rebalancing--that is, selling stock positions that have done well, and possibly adding to those that have not--will ensure that certain sectors don’t become too large a percentage of the whole portfolio.

Here are some suggestions to get you started. This portfolio is made up of companies in, yes, some of the normally high (or at least very steady) payout sectors, but also a smattering of standouts in other sectors.

 

Name

Ticker

Sector

Yield

Chevron

CVX

Energy

3.9%

Cisco Systems

CSCO

Technology

3.5%

Compass Minerals

CMP

Basic Materials

4.2%

Emerson Electric

EMR

Industrials

3.2%

Gap

GPS

Consumer Cyclical

3.6%

General Mills

GIS

Consumer Defensive

3.5%

GlaxoSmithKline

GSK

Healthcare

5.1%

Iron Mountain

IRM

Industrials

5.4%

Lamar Advertising

LAMR

Real Estate

4.9%

Magellan Midstream Partners

MMP

Energy

5.2%

Microsoft

MSFT

Technology

2.2%

Qualcomm

QCOM

Technology

4.4%

Simon Property Group

SPG

Real Estate

4.4%

Southern Co

SO

Utilities

4.6%

Starbucks

SBUX

Consumer Cyclical

1.9%

Tallgrass Energy Partners

TEP

Energy

7.4%

Target

TGT

Consumer Defensive

4.2%

Verizon

VZ

Communication Services

4.8%

Wells Fargo

WFC

Financial Services

2.9%

Average

 

 

4.2%

Data as of 9/7/17.

 

A dividend income portfolio with only one utility stock in it? Yes, it can be done! Putting a big piece of your portfolio in equities at retirement doesn’t have to be scary. As with any stock portfolio, market volatility will rear its head. But a portfolio like this will probably be less volatile than most equity portfolios, and will generate a hefty income stream too.

How would moving your investments to a portfolio like this one affect your retirement plan? WealthTrace can help you find out. Click here to learn more.

 

What would increasing your savings rate or investing in different asset classes do to your retirement plan? Could you handle a stretch of stock-market volatility? WealthTrace can help you find out. ...

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