A Plan For 9.3% Dividends And 640%+ Dividend Growth

 | Mar 30, 2021 05:35AM ET

Stocks are floating higher and interest rates are spiking. The US recovery is still fragile. Even so, people are being vaccinated fast and the global economy is a coiled spring. Should we take advantage of the current pullback to secure more dividend for our dollar now, while we still can?

I’ve got a two-step dividend-growth strategy for you that’s perfectly suited to this tough-to-predict market.

h2 Step 1: Focus on Dividend Stocks With “Relative Strength”/h2

In a pricey market like this one, it pays to go with dividend-growth stocks showing what I call “relative strength.”

Relative strength means strong stocks tend to stay strong, giving them a solid base from which to jump. Forget the bargain bin—we’re not looking for low P/E ratios here (these days, you won’t find many anyway!)—just stocks with momentum.

Everybody loves betting on a long shot, but the trouble is, these underdogs simply don’t come in enough to pay. We like strong stocks, smart management and megatrends. But everybody wants those, so where do we find our edge?

In two places:

  1. We find underappreciated stocks in popular sectors. Think: firms with a technology edge that are not—yet!—priced like go-go tech stocks.
  2. Or we look at an out-of-favor sector and find a stock that has been mislabeled. Real estate investment trusts (REITs) are one example—many people associate them with (dying) shopping malls, but there are many kinds of REITs out there, like cell-tower “landlord” Crown Castle International (NYSE:CCI) or lab owner Alexandria Real Estate Equities (NYSE:ARE).

Smith AO (NYSE:AOS) is a prime example of a stock that nearly everyone has misread. Most people see the Milwaukee-based seller of water heaters as too boring to bother with. In the early months of the pandemic, the investors who did give it a look worried that its commercial business would suffer as industrial clients put off orders.

But I suspected these orders weren’t gone—they’d just get punted into 2021 or 2022. And there was something else going on with the company’s stock last fall. Look at the left side of the chart below—you can see the stock (purple line) bob along for a few weeks, then establish a base and vault past the market (orange line).

h2 AOS Warms Up