2 Beaten-Down Dividend Stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average With Above-Average Yields. Are They Buys Now?

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Investors who are hungry for dividend-paying stocks that can be relied on will want to turn their attention toward the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI). It's a great place to start looking for streams of passive income.

Entry into the index is limited to well-established and nationally important businesses that can produce steady profits during both bull markets and prolonged economic downturns. However, such qualities aren't always permanent. For example, the index ejected Walgreens Boots Alliance this February. The pharmacy chain operator's underlying businesses have performed so poorly in recent years that the company could sell itself to a private equity firm.

The average trailing dividend yield among the 30 stocks that make up the Dow Jones Industrial Average is an uninspiring 1.9% at recent share prices. Two of the 30 don't distribute dividends at all. However, there are a couple of stocks in the index with yields more than twice that rate: Verizon Communications (NYSE: VZ) and Chevron (NYSE: CVX), both of which have tumbled by more than 10% in recent weeks. Those lower share prices have enhanced their yields, but do the companies have what it takes to maintain their payout-raising streaks?

1. Verizon

From a peak in early October through Dec. 18, shares of Verizon fell by 11%, but its dividend hasn't been cut. In September, the company raised its payout for the 18th consecutive year. At recent share prices, it offers new shareholders a great big 6.7% yield -- and the confidence that comes with owning a piece of the largest member of America's three-way telecommunications oligopoly.

Verizon's stock price has been beaten down because its revenue has been stagnating. Relatively tepid demand for new iPhones took a toll on its wireless equipment sales, which fell by 8.1% year over year to $5.3 billion in the third quarter.

Sinking hardware sales are disappointing, but there's little that Verizon can do about consumers' general lack of interest in upgrading their smartphones when models barely change from year to year. However, investors will be glad to know the wireless services it provides are still increasing in popularity. Its wireless service revenue rose 2.7% year over year in Q3 to $19.8 billion.

Verizon finished September with $121.4 billion in net unsecured debt. That's a heavy load, but it isn't completely out of control. The company has brought its net unsecured debt down to 2.5 times its adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA).