10 Dividend Stocks Insiders are Buying in May

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In this article, we will take a detailed look at the 10 Dividend Stocks Insiders are Buying in May. If you want to skip our detailed analysis and see the top 5 stocks in this list, click 5 Dividend Stocks Insiders are Buying in May.

Following the Federal Reserve's clear indication that it's ready to keep interest rates elevated, dividend stocks are back in the limelight as investors pile into defensive, safe stocks to dig in for further volatility ahead. After all, historical data shows that dividend stocks account for a huge chunk of market returns. Since 1960 through 2016, dividend stocks brought in about 29% of the total returns of the S&P 500 index. But what kind of dividend stocks should investors prefer when interest rates are high?

Performance of Dividend Stocks When Interest Rates are High

According to a study published by ProShares, stocks with consistent years of dividend increases outperform those with high dividends but weak dividend growth record when interest rates are stable, high or low. From May 2005 through April 2015, the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats Index outperformed the Dow Jones U.S. Select Dividend Index when rates were high, low and stable. Preferring dividend growth stocks over high yielders has produced phenomenal returns over the past few years. The S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats Index, which contains companies that have increased their payouts consistently for at least 25 years, is up about 48% over the past five years, while Dow Jones U.S. Select Dividend Index, which includes high-yield utilities dividend stocks, is up just 5% in the same period.

Dividend Stocks: Expectations in 2024

Analysts also believe dividend stocks are expected to perform well in 2024 as the market looks beyond Magnificent Seven stocks. Madison Funds in its Q1'2024 investor letter said that while its Madison Dividend Income Fund returned 3.7% in the first quarter, compared to SPY's 10% gain, it could perform better in the year since sectors like Energy, Industrials and Financials are taking over leadership positions, replacing Technology. The letter said Madison Income Fund's 49% of the portfolio is invested in Energy, Industrials and Financials. Another reason why the fund is bullish on dividend stocks is valuations:

"But the most important reason why we believe dividend stock performance may improve going forward is that dividend stocks are attractively valued compared to the broad market…..Some dividend funds are historically cheap vs. the S&P 500. The iShares Select Dividend exchange traded fund (DVY) is almost two standard deviations below its long-term average relative valuation compared to the S&P 500 over the past 20 years. Meaning, this level of relative valuation is well outside the norm. To quote the BofA Global Research report: “Dividend yield is unloved and cheap: active fund managers are massively underweight dividends after 2023’s credit scares. Valuations are attractive with some dividend funds trading 2-standard deviations cheap vs. the S&P 500.” Another key valuation metric we use is the relative dividend yield of the Dividend Income strategy compared to the S&P 500 and Russell 1000 Value indices. This is our preferred valuation metric, and we elaborate more on that below. As of quarter end, Dividend Income had a dividend yield of 2.84%, and a relative dividend yield of 2.1x the S&P 500 and 1.35x the Russell 1000 Value indices, which were the highest levels over the past 20 years. Our conclusion is that dividend stocks are historically cheap vs. the broad market, which we believe presents an attractive investment opportunity."