3 Dividend Dogs About To Become Analyst Darlings In 2023

 | Oct 23, 2022 01:37AM ET

I love dividend stocks that analysts hate. For two reasons:

  1. By definition, they can’t be downgraded.
  2. In weak moments, they are candidates to be upgraded.

And since vanilla investors, for whatever reason, listen to analysts, upgrades can provide a nice “pop” in the stock price.

So give us the stocks that can only “fall out of the basement window”—yielding a fat 14.6% on average—that carry this ultimate contrarian indicator:

They’ve lost the typically rosy analyst community. Which means it’s time for us to find them.

h2 Does Wall Street Say “Sell”? That’s a Big “Buy” Signal/h2

Wall Street’s “pros” are an optimistic bunch.

Stock analysts are, of course, tasked with studying a company, projecting things such as future revenues and earnings, and of course, providing expectations for shares—typically in the form of Buy/Hold/Sell calls.

While a generally objective bunch, analysts very clearly trend toward the positive. Sell calls are exceedingly rare, to the point where Hold calls are considered pretty bearish.

To wit, consider this: We’re in the midst of a bear market, possibly in the midst of a recession. And while we contrarians want to buy while the market is down, most research firms don’t see many upside catalysts in the near future—meaning stock analysts probably aren’t factoring a rising tide into their recommendations.

And yet, look at how chipper the pros still seem to be: