The Smartest Dividend Stocks to Buy With $1,000 Right Now

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The S&P 500 index is hitting new all-time highs in 2024, and that has resulted in its dividend yield average falling to a miserly 1.2%. Income investors can do much better than that, with some particularly attractive options currently available among somewhat unloved stocks like Enbridge (NYSE: ENB), Toronto-Dominion Bank (NYSE: TD), and Hormel Foods (NYSE: HRL).

Here's a quick primer on these three dividend stocks to explain why you might want to put $1,000 or more into this trio today.

1. Enbridge is shifting with the world around it

Enbridge is one of the largest midstream companies in North America, with a network of energy infrastructure that helps to move oil and natural gas around the world. That's the core of the business, representing around 75% of its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA). The company charges fees for the use of its assets, so this business is a highly reliable cash-flow generator. This strong base is part of the reason why Enbridge has been able to increase its dividend (paid in Canadian dollars), every year for 29 consecutive years.

The dividend yield is a lofty 6.4%, which is well above the energy sector average of roughly 3.4%. That's partly because pipelines are slow-growth businesses. But there's an oddity here because Enbridge gets around 22% of its EBITDA from natural gas utilities and 3% from clean energy. This is a purposeful move by management to shift with the world as it moves toward cleaner energy options.

It also puts Enbridge in a strange place for investors because it isn't a pure play on anything it does. If you can handle owning a reliable high-yield dividend stock that's going its own way (which happens to be the way the broader world is going), you might want to get to know Enbridge today.

2. Toronto-Dominion Bank admits it failed

The next stock up is Toronto-Dominion Bank, more commonly known as just TD Bank. It has a nearly 5.3% dividend yield versus the 2.5% for the average bank. Meanwhile, TD Bank has paid a dividend every year for over 100 years and managed to maintain its dividend through the Great Recession, a period that forced major U.S. banks to cut their dividends. It also happens to be a top-10 bank in North America and the No. 2 bank in Canada based on customer deposits.

So why is the yield more than double the industry average? TD Bank has just been fined roughly $3 billion by U.S. regulators for failing to stop its U.S. bank from being used to launder money. That's bad. U.S. regulators have also put TD Bank under an asset cap, which will limit its ability to grow in the U.S. market. That's worse.