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3 Magnificent S&P 500 Dividend Stocks Down 20% to 63% to Buy and Hold Forever

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Lots of investors enjoy keeping an eye on the market in general, and their portfolio in particular, standing ready to make a move whenever one is merited. Other people, however, have neither the time nor the inclination to monitor and manage their stocks. This crowd just wants to set it and forget it for years on end.

If you're part of this latter group, then there's good news: You have options. If you want to invest differently than your more active counterparts, plenty of tickers fit the bill.

Here's a closer look at three discounted S&P 500 dividend stocks you can feel good about buying and holding forever.

1. PepsiCo

For most investors, Coca-Cola is a go-to choice for a consumer goods name, and understandably so. Not only is it the world's most prolific family of beverage brands, but its namesake cola is also woven into the fabric of culture.

Coca-Cola may not be the best beverage bet for long-term investors, though. That honor arguably belongs to PepsiCo (NASDAQ: PEP) for a couple of reasons.

First, PepsiCo offers the higher dividend yield of the two companies. Whereas Coke's forward-looking yield currently stands at 2.9%, newcomers to PepsiCo will be plugging their money into a higher forward-looking yield of 3.5%. And remember: While both stocks' yields will ebb and flow over time, the effective yield on your invested dollars is relative to the price you pay.

Sure, Coca-Cola has the better dividend pedigree with 63 consecutive years of annual increases. PepsiCo is no slouch, though, having upped its yearly payout in each of the past 53 years. And since 2004, its dividend payments have grown measurably faster than Coca-Cola's.

Second, while these two beverage giants are seemingly interchangeable on the surface, their businesses are actually quite different. PepsiCo -- which also owns snack foods brands like Fritos, Lay's potato chips, Doritos, and Cheetos -- makes the majority of its products in-house; most of Coca-Cola's production is outsourced to third-party bottlers.

Coke's model is more profitable, since bottling operations are often low-margin. PepsiCo's in-house approach gives it tighter control of the entirety of its business, though, meaning it's nimbler when it needs to be. This won't matter most of the time, but when it does, it really matters.

PepsiCo shares are currently down 20% from their 2023 high, which is inviting, to say the least.

2. Merck

It's been a tough past few months for shareholders in Merck (NYSE: MRK). The stock is down nearly 30% since last June for a range of reasons including slowing sales of Gardasil in China, fresh competitive pricing in the U.S., December's decision to end two oncology drug trials, and disappointing guidance for the current year.