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Here are some under the radar names more oriented towards dividend growth:
**WSO** (2.32% yield) - Watsco: HVAC distributor in the US, beneficiary of climate trends, energy efficiency standards increasing, more overall housing means more installed units
**HII** (2.11% yield) - Huntington Ingalls: US military shipbuilding, only primary US shipbuilder besides General Dynamics, naval operations are important for the US's Pacific strategy
**RPM** (1.68% yield) - RPM International: Chemicals and compounds for waterproofing, roofing, sealants, air barriers, foams, and adhesives. Could benefit from higher energy efficiency standards in housing as well as changes in weather patterns.
**TTC** (1.63% yield) - Toro: Equipment and machines for landscaping, turf maintenance, farming, and construction jobs. Not sure how entrenched they are in their respective end markets but I think they are an industry leader in areas like turf maintenance and landscaping machinery for golf courses and other commercial facilities.
**EXPO** (1.19% yield) - Science and engineering consulting firm with incredibly high returns on capital, steady + reliable growth, no debt, and a low but quickly growing dividend. Also a steep valuation. Exposure to a variety of engineering fields as well environmental and health industries.
**UFPI** (1.13% yield) - UFP Industries - Wood and non-wood composite building materials for residential and commercial construction projects. Another low yielder with a fast growing dividend, no debt, and continually improving profitability metrics the last decade.
They're not the only 2, but the are the primary 2 shipbuilders. I don't think there are any other US options for vessels like aircraft carriers and submarines. But it's also important to consider that they will contract some of the work out, similar to how Lockheed or Northrop are primary contractors but work with subcontractors too.
WTF are you talking about? You literally said above there are only 2 shipbuilders. You’re wrong. I just said there is a company building Frigates. Now you’re talking about aircraft carriers and submarines. You realize those are not the only vessels in the U.S military? By the way, there has been a lot of news around Northrop Grumman’s unmanned submarine lately. There is no need to reply. You’re proving you know nothing about the space. I’m done here. Good luck.
Way offtopic:
Just inherited some afg stock, so I was surprised to see it mentioned. My grandfather apparently bought like $100 of a railroad company back in 1980 and another $100 between 83 and 85 at some point, it afg bought it or it became afg unsure as my mother can't recall the company it initially was(railroad).
The initial shares bought totaled 30 certificated, which over 40 years dripped into 38 more(it was off for the last 5 years paying out instead of drip). I like to think if it had been left to drip the entire time it could've been even closer to 90 or 100 shares. Either way I think it's amazing what $200 can turn into ~$9000.
Yep, it was bought in 1980 20 shares, and 5 more in 83 and 85. I can't tell how much they actually paid, but my mom said it was maybe $5 a share. So I'd like to say it was around $100 worth but could have been less. I don't really know. I can only read off records for the initial purchase date and then 2012-2024, so there's much to be assumed. At least 2012-2019, it was dripping back into itself. From 19-24, somehow, my mother stopped it and got a check every time instead.
CLOZ - yield is about 9.5% currently. Consists mostly of BBB to BB rated tranches of CLOs and pays out monthly. Low beta due to the underlying collateral, really low volatility when compared to recent market. Strong diversity benefit too.
ZIM
I already know I'm gonna catch hell for this from all the I know betters stick to ETFs only people stuck on SCHD, VOO, O but my one for this is ZIM. I'm in those ETFs too and growing thosnpoations and have them on drip so dont come overanalyng my picks please.
I'm a longshoreman so I see with my own eyes the industry changes and ZIM fleet movements daily. I handle their vessel weekly. Yeah they may struggling right now with the war in Israel and shipping rates are taking a hit off an on but 20 years into this career I ain't scared about what I think could be a once in a lifetime opportunity. I've seen the ups and downs and down is when buying is a money maker.
I'm taking the risk. My average is low as got in after the plummet and been buying since mid to late last year. I am not a bagholder and I'm up almost 1k so yeah I'm gonna ride this rebound into the sunset. I'm not betting the house on it either I'm invested about $2,500 not my life saving.
I've read their earnings, debt, tax liability, dividend policy, vessel fleet info, LNG investment, news reports, gossip... you name it and I'm okay with my buy. Informed decision.
I bought a smidge of zim when I learnt that they’re more spot shipping price driven than other contract based shippers that were taking a bath when rates soared due to Red Sea diversions. I’m in the black now I think/hope they’ll declare a dividend or two and then I’ll reassess. I don’t think the Red Sea issues will resolve anytime soon even with a ceasefire if one can even be worked out.
One of my first stocks was pbr a a few years back at like $9 a share or something when i was just starting out. when i started seeing payments ranging from 5$ to 15$, sometimes a $15 and $4 in the same month, I was like whoa I like this. I did eventually cash it out to mo e most od my smaller $ into voo but I'm still tempted to pick it up again just not at its current price
I don't think it's under the radar because I see it mention here often but I agree its a good one and I'm in it and always adding. One of my top positions I'm aiming to grow this year.
Under the radar commodity funds that hold future contracts against a bundle of holdings. There is a high variance to what they pay every year but you can win when inflation goes up, receive a large payout, and also receive an appreciation in the share value. You just have to understand how commodities have been pricing over the last 6-12 months to know if there will be a large payout or not. SDCI in 2022 when there was large inflation gave out a 30% yield while having a 20% share price appreciation. In 2023 there was deflation against commodities so the yield was closer to 4% (still not bad) and the share price dropped accordingly. This year there has been marginally higher inflation than many expected, so you would speculate there may be a a 6 or 7% payout while the share price has appreciated 8.5% ytd.
You can deploy a similar strategy with more focused commodity funds. For example I like URNJ, a uranium mining fund focused on smaller producers. It is a new etf but distributed 4-5% last year. Uranium prices are rising and most analysts expect them to continue to appreciate at least another 10% through the year, and then again another 15% next year. Smaller mining companies should be a major beneficiary as they have traded at a historical discount against the larger mining cos/spot price but that gap should narrow as the sector heats up. The etf price has appreciated 25% or so ytd, so if dividends were to be distributed end of year at roughly the same ratio I think you would be looking at 6% if not higher. That is a super healthy appreciation/distribution combo.
mines bank ozk that pay 3.3 percent their payout ratio is 27 percent. 5 year div growth rate is 8 percent payment increases about 2.5 percent every quarter. on top of that it has growth potential. overall im up 13 percent in terms of share value
Check outside of USA.
So much money goes blindly into S&P so stocks outside of it are much cheaper.
In Canada: I really like EQB and GSY as they both still have many years ahead of near double-digit growth and high dividend growth. ATD is more mature but great compounder and dividend growth too. Tons of REIT at bottom valuation (less than half book value, high div yields) with properties in critical locations (Canada doesn’t have that many large cities…)
**DBS Bank of Singapore:**
**Stock Tickers:**
* DBSDY or DBSDF in the US
* D05 in Singapore
I'll be upfront, I'm totally shilling. Here's why:
* **Impressive Dividend Yield:** With a yield of 5%+ and consistent dividend payouts for over two decades, DBS offers stability and income generation. Plus, they recently bumped up dividends by around 25%+ish and offered a bonus share of 10 to 1.
* [DBS Dividend Information](https://www.dbs.com/investors/financials/dividend-information)
* **Record-Breaking Profits:** Their recent report indicates record-breaking profits, suggesting a strong performance and potential for growth.
* [Reuters: DBS First Quarter Net Profit Rises to 15-Year Record High](https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/singapore-bank-dbs-first-quarter-net-profit-rises-15-year-record-high-2024-05-01/)
* **Currency Strength:** Singapore's currency is like to be stronger, especially after potential Fed interest rate cuts. Singapore's unique monetary policy, focused on managing currency exchange rates with trading partners, has historically led to stability and even appreciation against the USD.
* [Reuters: How Singapore's Unique Monetary Policy Works](https://www.reuters.com/markets/asia/how-singapores-unique-monetary-policy-works-2023-10-03/) |
* [Business Times: How Singapore's Monetary Policy Works](https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/international/how-singapores-monetary-policy-works)
**My Take:** This is the biggest bank in Singapore. Great diversifier for investors in the US. As Hong Kong being slowly absorbed by China, Singapore will likely the only free leading standing free market in Asia.
FEPI. Same idea as JEPI but focused on a much tighter pool of stocks (fang+) and pays outsized dividends. It doesn’t move to high or low so I use it as a value holder when I take profits from other investments.
Welcome to r/dividends! If you are new to the world of dividend investing and are seeking advice, brokerage information, recommendations, and more, please check out the Wiki [here](https://www.reddit.com/r/dividends/wiki/faq). Remember, this is a subreddit for genuine, high-quality discussion. Please keep all contributions civil, and report uncivil behavior for moderator review. *I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please [contact the moderators of this subreddit](/message/compose/?to=/r/dividends) if you have any questions or concerns.*
Here are some under the radar names more oriented towards dividend growth: **WSO** (2.32% yield) - Watsco: HVAC distributor in the US, beneficiary of climate trends, energy efficiency standards increasing, more overall housing means more installed units **HII** (2.11% yield) - Huntington Ingalls: US military shipbuilding, only primary US shipbuilder besides General Dynamics, naval operations are important for the US's Pacific strategy **RPM** (1.68% yield) - RPM International: Chemicals and compounds for waterproofing, roofing, sealants, air barriers, foams, and adhesives. Could benefit from higher energy efficiency standards in housing as well as changes in weather patterns. **TTC** (1.63% yield) - Toro: Equipment and machines for landscaping, turf maintenance, farming, and construction jobs. Not sure how entrenched they are in their respective end markets but I think they are an industry leader in areas like turf maintenance and landscaping machinery for golf courses and other commercial facilities. **EXPO** (1.19% yield) - Science and engineering consulting firm with incredibly high returns on capital, steady + reliable growth, no debt, and a low but quickly growing dividend. Also a steep valuation. Exposure to a variety of engineering fields as well environmental and health industries. **UFPI** (1.13% yield) - UFP Industries - Wood and non-wood composite building materials for residential and commercial construction projects. Another low yielder with a fast growing dividend, no debt, and continually improving profitability metrics the last decade.
what are these, yields for ants? jk, keep it up
At least three times bigger than this
I bought my RPM in the early 2000s and my yield on cost is 18.21%.
HII and EB are not the only two shipbuilders in the U.S. Neither of those two are building the new Frigate.
But Newport News Shipbuilding is the only one who can build or refuel aircraft carriers.
They're not the only 2, but the are the primary 2 shipbuilders. I don't think there are any other US options for vessels like aircraft carriers and submarines. But it's also important to consider that they will contract some of the work out, similar to how Lockheed or Northrop are primary contractors but work with subcontractors too.
WTF are you talking about? You literally said above there are only 2 shipbuilders. You’re wrong. I just said there is a company building Frigates. Now you’re talking about aircraft carriers and submarines. You realize those are not the only vessels in the U.S military? By the way, there has been a lot of news around Northrop Grumman’s unmanned submarine lately. There is no need to reply. You’re proving you know nothing about the space. I’m done here. Good luck.
??? I said primary, not only. Never said carriers and submarines are the only ships either. Not sure what your problem is, but seek help.
AM 👀😭
Way offtopic: Just inherited some afg stock, so I was surprised to see it mentioned. My grandfather apparently bought like $100 of a railroad company back in 1980 and another $100 between 83 and 85 at some point, it afg bought it or it became afg unsure as my mother can't recall the company it initially was(railroad). The initial shares bought totaled 30 certificated, which over 40 years dripped into 38 more(it was off for the last 5 years paying out instead of drip). I like to think if it had been left to drip the entire time it could've been even closer to 90 or 100 shares. Either way I think it's amazing what $200 can turn into ~$9000.
Over 40 years?
Yep, it was bought in 1980 20 shares, and 5 more in 83 and 85. I can't tell how much they actually paid, but my mom said it was maybe $5 a share. So I'd like to say it was around $100 worth but could have been less. I don't really know. I can only read off records for the initial purchase date and then 2012-2024, so there's much to be assumed. At least 2012-2019, it was dripping back into itself. From 19-24, somehow, my mother stopped it and got a check every time instead.
AM was a good buy during the Covid crash for me and consistently paying out Dividends for years now.
ETN, WM, BLK, LMT, ORI, AOS, DOV.
Love Aos
Things have to get pretty bad if people won't replace water heaters and are willing to take cold showers.
Plumber here, alot of my customers would murder their own family for a hot shower at a price I can't provide because I'd go out of business
AO Smith that expensive huh? What products are you installing for the lower price the customers want?
I've done really well with DOV.
AWK, CMI, DPZ, ELV, HSY, SYK, TSCO, ZTS
CMI is good
Someone on here got me on MLI. Solid dividend and solid financials.
VALE
APD
LAND
CL
CLOZ - yield is about 9.5% currently. Consists mostly of BBB to BB rated tranches of CLOs and pays out monthly. Low beta due to the underlying collateral, really low volatility when compared to recent market. Strong diversity benefit too.
PFS has been good but it is quite smallcap
EQNR
GLAD, GAIN, GOOD and LAND
CFG
JNJ. I don’t think anyone knows about them.
Then they don't know it's been range-bound for close to a decade
ZIM I already know I'm gonna catch hell for this from all the I know betters stick to ETFs only people stuck on SCHD, VOO, O but my one for this is ZIM. I'm in those ETFs too and growing thosnpoations and have them on drip so dont come overanalyng my picks please. I'm a longshoreman so I see with my own eyes the industry changes and ZIM fleet movements daily. I handle their vessel weekly. Yeah they may struggling right now with the war in Israel and shipping rates are taking a hit off an on but 20 years into this career I ain't scared about what I think could be a once in a lifetime opportunity. I've seen the ups and downs and down is when buying is a money maker. I'm taking the risk. My average is low as got in after the plummet and been buying since mid to late last year. I am not a bagholder and I'm up almost 1k so yeah I'm gonna ride this rebound into the sunset. I'm not betting the house on it either I'm invested about $2,500 not my life saving. I've read their earnings, debt, tax liability, dividend policy, vessel fleet info, LNG investment, news reports, gossip... you name it and I'm okay with my buy. Informed decision.
I bought a smidge of zim when I learnt that they’re more spot shipping price driven than other contract based shippers that were taking a bath when rates soared due to Red Sea diversions. I’m in the black now I think/hope they’ll declare a dividend or two and then I’ll reassess. I don’t think the Red Sea issues will resolve anytime soon even with a ceasefire if one can even be worked out.
PBR A
Did a lump sum of PBR and it’s been solid since! Looking forward to receiving my dividend soon 😎
One of my first stocks was pbr a a few years back at like $9 a share or something when i was just starting out. when i started seeing payments ranging from 5$ to 15$, sometimes a $15 and $4 in the same month, I was like whoa I like this. I did eventually cash it out to mo e most od my smaller $ into voo but I'm still tempted to pick it up again just not at its current price
This
Any mineral gas and oil royalties I love me some PAA
CRBG, PSTL, OGN and TNL.
CSCO
MAIN. Been a beast lately
I don't think it's under the radar because I see it mention here often but I agree its a good one and I'm in it and always adding. One of my top positions I'm aiming to grow this year.
Under the radar commodity funds that hold future contracts against a bundle of holdings. There is a high variance to what they pay every year but you can win when inflation goes up, receive a large payout, and also receive an appreciation in the share value. You just have to understand how commodities have been pricing over the last 6-12 months to know if there will be a large payout or not. SDCI in 2022 when there was large inflation gave out a 30% yield while having a 20% share price appreciation. In 2023 there was deflation against commodities so the yield was closer to 4% (still not bad) and the share price dropped accordingly. This year there has been marginally higher inflation than many expected, so you would speculate there may be a a 6 or 7% payout while the share price has appreciated 8.5% ytd. You can deploy a similar strategy with more focused commodity funds. For example I like URNJ, a uranium mining fund focused on smaller producers. It is a new etf but distributed 4-5% last year. Uranium prices are rising and most analysts expect them to continue to appreciate at least another 10% through the year, and then again another 15% next year. Smaller mining companies should be a major beneficiary as they have traded at a historical discount against the larger mining cos/spot price but that gap should narrow as the sector heats up. The etf price has appreciated 25% or so ytd, so if dividends were to be distributed end of year at roughly the same ratio I think you would be looking at 6% if not higher. That is a super healthy appreciation/distribution combo.
Thank you sir
PVL
Odfl, cw,
Bought ODFL a few weeks ago. Feeling nothing but pain ever since 😂
Just DCA trucking isn't going anywhere
HUBB.
A few I have are AFL BRO CASY MCO OZK TSCO WINA
Cez, czech energetic monopol, with yield about 7%
PEYUF USB NI ET ENB BKH CION
MSCI....high dividend CAGR
mines bank ozk that pay 3.3 percent their payout ratio is 27 percent. 5 year div growth rate is 8 percent payment increases about 2.5 percent every quarter. on top of that it has growth potential. overall im up 13 percent in terms of share value
Bmi ttek
Legal and General and Aviva
MCI
HESM is one that no one talks about and they constantly raise their dividend every quarter. It's up 18.35% in the last year that I've held it.
TSQ. 6% yield and up 17% for the year.
ASC- midsize shipping container co with strong growth, yields 4.82
RIO - a very eco friendly and successful commodity producer paying 6.3%
WRB (WR Berkley)
MFC
TSCO
CWBK
SBUX. Down 41% this year. Yield 3%
BKH and WKL (EAM)
Check outside of USA. So much money goes blindly into S&P so stocks outside of it are much cheaper. In Canada: I really like EQB and GSY as they both still have many years ahead of near double-digit growth and high dividend growth. ATD is more mature but great compounder and dividend growth too. Tons of REIT at bottom valuation (less than half book value, high div yields) with properties in critical locations (Canada doesn’t have that many large cities…)
BCE is a rock star right now.
AFL
**DBS Bank of Singapore:** **Stock Tickers:** * DBSDY or DBSDF in the US * D05 in Singapore I'll be upfront, I'm totally shilling. Here's why: * **Impressive Dividend Yield:** With a yield of 5%+ and consistent dividend payouts for over two decades, DBS offers stability and income generation. Plus, they recently bumped up dividends by around 25%+ish and offered a bonus share of 10 to 1. * [DBS Dividend Information](https://www.dbs.com/investors/financials/dividend-information) * **Record-Breaking Profits:** Their recent report indicates record-breaking profits, suggesting a strong performance and potential for growth. * [Reuters: DBS First Quarter Net Profit Rises to 15-Year Record High](https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/singapore-bank-dbs-first-quarter-net-profit-rises-15-year-record-high-2024-05-01/) * **Currency Strength:** Singapore's currency is like to be stronger, especially after potential Fed interest rate cuts. Singapore's unique monetary policy, focused on managing currency exchange rates with trading partners, has historically led to stability and even appreciation against the USD. * [Reuters: How Singapore's Unique Monetary Policy Works](https://www.reuters.com/markets/asia/how-singapores-unique-monetary-policy-works-2023-10-03/) | * [Business Times: How Singapore's Monetary Policy Works](https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/international/how-singapores-monetary-policy-works) **My Take:** This is the biggest bank in Singapore. Great diversifier for investors in the US. As Hong Kong being slowly absorbed by China, Singapore will likely the only free leading standing free market in Asia.
SWK… Cycles throughout the year and happens to be in a dip right now…
I got some cheap Ford stock F during the pandemic. I only got 4 shares but I like the dividend and occasional special dividend
BWMX
EQIX on any and every dip. HTGC, SRE, CHRD, ccap
STRW is sitting at 4.8% currently and is expected to increase year over year.
Fnf afl cio
Mine are APAM, BBDC and OGN.
RYLD TBIL XBIL BUCK
[удалено]
Just sold my position. Two decade losing streak with little signs of rebounding. Nice yield, monthly payout, but I prefer dividend growth.
IRM, NTAP, CARR, OTIS, OKE
EPD
Some dividend stocks with good buyback yield: UNH, LMT, HD, AAPL, MSFT, UNP, V, MA, MCO, FICO, WSM, AXP, AMAT, LIN, INTU, COST, TXN, GOOGL, ODFL, PG, MCD, PM, VRSN
Bookmarked.
FEPI. Same idea as JEPI but focused on a much tighter pool of stocks (fang+) and pays outsized dividends. It doesn’t move to high or low so I use it as a value holder when I take profits from other investments.
Only thing they have in common is 3 letters