Wall Street Hates These Dividend Payers, But Should You?

 | Feb 05, 2021 04:32AM ET

The markets sure turned against “the little guy” in a hurry.

We chatted about the massive run-up in GameStop (NYSE:GME) on Wednesday. I had a buddy of mine, who just happens to be a loyal Reddit reader, catch “short squeeze” fever.

If these guys and gals had tried to go anywhere, they’d have been stopped by the temperature check. That’s how hot they were running as Wall Street big shots were being forced to “buy back” their previously shorted GME shares at astronomical prices.

But short squeezes are often short lived, and GME has already plummeted two-thirds below its peak. Why the carnage? Well, the stock was heavily shorted for a reason. Its business model (selling CDs in malls!) was fundamentally flawed.

As contrarian-minded investors, we shouldn’t mind short positions in the stocks that we buy. Our challenge is that we must make sure that the short sellers are “missing something”—that they’re actually wrong about their wager.

Let’s consider the case of W.P. Carey (NYSE:WPC), an industrial landlord I recommended in the January 2019 issue of my Contrarian Income Report research service, and sold a year later for a market-thrashing 27.7% total return.

Thank the short sellers, which ignored the company’s generous 6%-plus dividend, 21 straight years of payout hikes and long, locked-in leases.

h2 Shorts Give Up, We Buy In