Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street. Upgrade Now
3 Magnificent S&P 500 Dividend Stocks Down 36% to 64% to Buy and Hold Forever

In This Article:

Like bargains? Need income? You can find undervalued income-producing stocks. Plenty of them are even familiar names found within the S&P 500 index. Here's a closer look at three such stocks that might be at home in your portfolio.

Ford Motor Company

There's no denying the automobile industry is undergoing multiple sea changes that don't favor Detroit's iconic names, like Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F). Not only are cars lasting longer, for example, but automobile ownership is on the decline. Fewer younger people are getting driver's licenses, opting for Uber or Lyft instead.

It would also be naive to pretend Ford has become hypercompetitive within the growing electric vehicle (EV) arena. Auto information site CarEdge reports Ford's fourth-quarter U.S. market share at only 8.7%, behind Tesla and General Motors, but also behind Hyundai and Kia.

Given all of this, it's not surprising that the carmaker's profits haven't really grown since the early 1990s, even if its revenue has. That's the chief reason Ford stock has underperformed since the early 2000s. Indeed, not only are shares down 64% from their early 2022 peak, they are also currently priced where they were at the beginning of 1995. There's just not a convincing argument that growth is anywhere on the horizon.

Now take a step back and look at the bigger picture. Ford may not be growing much (if at all) right now, but with a forward-looking dividend yield of 6.5% based on a dependable quarterly payment of $0.15 per share, it's dishing out more than comparably risky bonds or stocks. Also note that the company has chosen to reward shareholders with the occasional special bonus dividend rather than committing to a higher dividend payment which might put it under financial strain. Although these one-off payments shouldn't be counted on by shareholders who need dividends to pay their bills, they're still income.

There's also straight-up value here. While Ford's growth is tepid to nonexistent, this stock's forward-looking price/earnings ratio is a dirt-cheap 5.5 based on projected earnings. With the exception of the COVID-19-prompted disruption of 2020 and 2021, Ford's earnings proven mostly resilient of late.

Merck

It's been a tough few months for Merck (NYSE: MRK) shareholders. This pharmaceutical stock's now down 36% from last March's peak, with most of this weakness coming after last September in response to a couple of rounds of disappointing quarters. Its diabetes treatments Januvia and Janumet are now facing stiff price competition, while its HPV vaccine Gardasil is running into headwinds in China.