3 Dividend Stocks To Boost Fixed Income In A Low Interest Rate Environment

 | Apr 07, 2021 01:22PM ET

Since the pandemic started, it’s become more difficult to earn decent retirement income from your portfolio. Many blue-chip companies have either suspended their payouts or slashed them to preserve cash as earnings cratered. 

If you’re among those savers who have to plan for their retirement journey solo, or are still working but rely on fixed income payouts from your holdings, unfortunately, you won’t find many high-yielding opportunities with which to earn a decent income stream. 

Retirees also face an interest-rate environment in which some of the safest assets, like government bonds and bank saving accounts, are paying close to nothing. The yield on the 10-year Treasury bond, for example, is nearing 1.7%, which hardly compensates for inflation.

In this challenging environment, we advise yield-seeking retirees to focus more on companies with stable balance sheets that have trended to dividend increases, rather than stocks with the biggest overall dividend yields. 

Below, are three dividend stocks that we believe can sustain their dividends and provide a regular income stream to retirees in this low-rate environment. 

h2 1. Bank of Nova Scotia/h2

Market Cap: $75.73 billion
Quarterly Payout: $0.71
Dividend Yield: 4.5%

Canadian banks are very different from their American counterparts. They operate in a kind of oligopoly with very limited foreign competition. This lack of outside challenge has allowed these lenders to not only maintain their market share but also retain some very robust profit margins.

While this isn’t good for consumers who have little choice but to accept exceptionally high banking and investment fees, these lenders have been a great place for investors, especially when compared with their American peers.

If you want to earn an exceptionally high dividend yield from one of these lenders, the Toronto-based Bank of Nova Scotia (NYSE:BNS) is one option.