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2 No-Brainer Dividend Stocks With Yields Above 5% That You Can Buy With $150 Right Now

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If you're looking for a way to boost your income stream while barely lifting a finger, high-yield dividend stocks are a great way to make it happen. While many investors are poring over every development in the artificial intelligence (AI) space, plenty of quality businesses that distribute steadily growing profits are being ignored.

At the moment, you can get a yield of 5.6% from two extremely reliable real estate investment trusts (REITs). W.P. Carey (NYSE: WPC) and Realty Income (NYSE: O) own thousands of commercial properties in the U.S. and abroad. Instead of managing their properties, they employ net leases that transfer all the variable costs associated with building ownership, such as maintenance and taxes, to tenants. At recent prices, $150 is more than enough to scoop up shares of both stocks.

With dozens of different tenants locked into long-term leases that include annual rent escalators, W.P. Carey and Realty Income produce very predictable cash flows. Here's why adding them to a diversified portfolio now and holding them forever looks like a smart way to boost a passive income stream.

1. W.P. Carey

W.P. Carey is a highly diversified net lease REIT that lowered its dividend payout by 20% in 2023 to account for the spinoff of its underperforming office building segment. Its long-term shareholders experienced a significant dividend cut, but they also received shares of Net Lease Office Properties.

While most investors agree that exiting the office building business was the right decision, many REIT investors still shun the stock. It's been trading at about 28% below the peak it reached in 2022.

And W.P. Carey has already started raising its quarterly payout. Last December, the REIT raised its dividend payout for the fourth time since reducing it in late 2023. At recent prices, the stock offers a great big 5.6% dividend yield; steady raises quarter after quarter seem likely.

W.P. Carey leverages an investment-grade credit rating and a big presence in international markets to invest at interest rates that most of its peers can only dream of. With a majority of its debt originally denominated in euros, the average interest rate on its outstanding debts was just 3.3% at the end of 2024.

Net lease REITs like W.P. Carey don't necessarily need their tenants to succeed. Tenants only need to perform well enough to meet steadily rising rent payments. With one of the most diversified tenant lists in the business, several of this REIT's largest tenants would need to go belly-up before shareholders would need to begin worrying about another dividend reduction. W.P. Carey's largest tenant, Extra Space Storage, is responsible for just 2.7% of the total annualized base rent expected this year, so the list of tenants is diversified.