The Cheapest Dividend Stocks Paying 5% Or More

 | Sep 02, 2022 05:23AM ET

The market’s reaction to Jay Powell’s “hawkish” Jackson Hole rant was interesting. He spoke for eight minutes. Stocks crashed for the rest of the trading session and have continued lower since.

Funny because I didn’t hear anything new. The mid-summer sucker’s rally was based on the hope that Powell would “pivot” early in 2023 and lower rates again.

He can’t unless the economy is really in the tank by then. Like “deep recession” bad. Otherwise, inflation is going to come back.

Larry Summers compared it to skimping on a doctor’s prescription. If you stop taking your antibiotics too soon, the infection comes back.

We already have a higher level of inflation baked into the 2020s as well as a supply crunch in energy—not to mention food. And the world is “deglobalizing” with the US bringing industry back home. All inflationary.

Does that mean all hope is lost? Perhaps! C’mon I kid (mostly), but I do believe that a hawkish Fed and continued inflation risks should inspire us income investors to demand discounts.

Only the cheapest, highest paying stocks will do. Let’s review five now.

h2 Kohl’s /h2
  • Dividend Yield: 7.1%
  • Forward P/E: 8.8

Let’s get started by shining a light on Kohl's (NYSE:KSS), which is a cautionary tale of how even dirt-cheap stocks can still get cheaper—and more expensive, all at the same time.

Back in June, I warned about the discount retailer:

Kohl’s difficulties stem somewhat from its product mix. Namely, Kohl’s sells things—clothes, kitchenware, bedding and the like. But right now, consumers are being pulled in other directions, with some money heading toward more staples purchases amid higher food and basics costs, while other consumer dollars are heading toward what’s expected to be a monster travel season.

Fast-forward to August, and the retailer was forced to slash its full-year guidance, seeing earnings of $2.80 to $3.20 per share (down from an outlook of $6.45 to $6.85 previously) on revenues expected to decline 5% to 6% year-over-year (from flat to 1% higher previously).

Said Kohl’s (emphasis mine):

Second-quarter results were impacted by a weakening macro environment, high inflation and dampened consumer spending, which especially pressured our middle-income customers. We have adjusted our plans, implementing actions to reduce inventory and lower expenses to account for a softer demand outlook.

But the biggest drubbing KSS took came on July 1, when Kohl’s announced the end of its “strategic review process”—and the end of talks with Franchise Group (NASDAQ:FRG), which owns The Vitamin Shoppe, about its proposal to buy Kohl’s for $60 per share.

h2 Kohl’s Loses a Third of Its Value in Just Three Months