3 High-Yielding Dividend Stocks That Haven’t Been This Cheap in Years

Buying a quality dividend stock near a multiyear low can be a great move, especially if you’re willing to be patient and hang on for the long term. As long as the dividend remains intact, the yield moves up as a stock price falls in value. And that’s been the case for all the stocks listed here.

PepsiCo (NASDAQ: PEP), UnitedHealth Group (NYSE: UNH), and United Parcel Service (NYSE: UPS) are all down more than 15% in the past 12 months and are trading near multiyear lows. Their yields are also all firmly above the S&P 500 average of 1.4%.

Here’s a look at why these three can be good stocks to buy, despite all the bearishness surrounding their respective businesses.

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Beverage and snack company PepsiCo has experienced a 25% decline in value over the past 12 months. The company’s growth has been underwhelming, and sales for the first three months of this year were down around 2%. Investors are also concerned that the growing popularity of GLP-1 weight loss treatments could result in a continued decline in demand for snacks.

However, the company generated positive organic growth of more than 1% during the first quarter of this year, and it was a significant impact from foreign exchange that resulted in the overall decline in sales. And while sales aren’t taking off, that doesn’t mean the business is in deep trouble; many consumers are, after all, trading down to private label brands in an effort to save money due to worsening economic conditions. Price increases have also taken their toll in recent years. But with many strong brands in its portfolio, PepsiCo can still make for a solid dividend stock to hang onto as its business could recover in the long run.

The company has generated $7.3 billion in free cash flow over the trailing 12 months, which is also about how much it has paid in dividends during that stretch. While the company is facing some challenges, it’s not in a perilous situation, and the payout isn’t in any imminent danger.

PepsiCo’s stock hasn’t been trading at these levels since 2021, and with a price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple below 20, it could make for a good value buy right now.

Leading health insurance company UnitedHealth is also trading around its four-year low as rising costs have chipped away at its bottom line.

The company faced adversity in its most recent quarter, including “heightened care activity indications” in its Medicare Advantage business. However, it notes that the issues it experienced during the period are “highly addressable” this year, as it’s confident it can get back to growing its earnings in the range of 13% to 16%, which has been a long-term target for the business.