3 Dividend Stocks With Yields Between 4.5% and 7% to Power Your Passive Income Stream in 2025

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The dividend yield of the S&P 500 has decreased in recent years due to the dominance of growth stocks in the index and stock prices outpacing dividend growth rates. With the index now yielding just 1.3%, investors looking for stocks to boost their passive income stream may want to consider higher-yielding options.

Chevron (NYSE: CVX), United Parcel Service (NYSE: UPS), and the chemical specialist Dow (NYSE: DOW) yield 4.5%, 5.3%, and 7%, respectively, at the time of this writing. All three companies have sold off in recent months and are hovering around 52-week lows.

Here's why three Motley Fool contributors think the sell-off in these dividend stocks is a buying opportunity for patient investors.

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Chevron stands to improve its free cash flow with its acquisition of Hess

Scott Levine (Chevron): With the gift-giving season upon us, many investors are taking time off from their holiday shopping to tend to their financial goals for the coming year. For any of them dedicated to ramping up their passive income streams in 2025, Chevron warrants close consideration -- especially now.

Currently, the stock is sitting in the bargain bin, providing investors with a great opportunity to load up on shares along with their 4.5% forward dividend yield. It's a powerhouse when it comes to generating cash. For example, the company has consistently outperformed one of its closest peers, ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM), over the past five years in generating free cash flow (FCF).

CVX Free Cash Flow Per Share (Annual) Chart
CVX free cash flow per share (annual), data by YCharts.

And Chevron can excel even further at generating FCF should it succeed in acquiring Hess (NYSE: HES), which seems even more likely now that the Federal Trade Commission has given the transaction the green light after completing an antitrust review. According to management, the acquisition will assist in growing revenue and FCF beyond the five-year production and FCF growth rates it had previously projected, extending it into the 2030s. With greater FCF, the company can continue hiking its dividend, as it has for more than 35 years.

Chevron had expected to complete the acquisition in the first half of 2024, but it's now facing an arbitration panel with ExxonMobil, which has raised objections to the deal. This has clearly spooked investors into thinking it is in jeopardy despite both parties remaining confident it will ultimately proceed.

Reflecting the market's skepticism, Chevron stock is now changing hands at 7.2 times operating cash flow, a discount to its five-year average cash flow multiple of 8.3. For those looking to strengthen their dividend income in the new year, the stock now provides a great option.