3 Stocks to Add to Your Social Security Income

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As designed, Social Security expects to replace around 40% of a typical retiree's income, even less than that for those that happen to earn a higher-than-average income. As if that weren't enough, Social Security's trust funds are on track to empty by 2034, which would slash average benefits by almost 25% if nothing is done to head off the collapse. If living on somewhere between 30% and 40% of your current income in retirement doesn't sound all that appealing to you, you need to invest to make up the gap.

Even in retirement, it makes sense to own some stocks to improve your chances of preserving your long-term purchasing power. Still, not every stock fits within a retiree's portfolio. It takes a solid combination of dividends, solid operations backing up those dividends, and decent prospects over time to be worthy of a place in a retiree's account. With those characteristics, these three stocks look worthy of consideration if you're a retiree looking to add to your Social Security income.

The Rock of Gibraltar
The Rock of Gibraltar

Image source: Getty Images.

An insurance titan that's "as solid as a rock"

Prudential Financial (NYSE: PRU) can trace its history back over 140 years. It's so proud of its financial strength that it uses the Rock of Gibraltar as its corporate symbol to showcase that stability. In recent times, it even managed to avoid taking a TARP bailout during the financial crisis, something that few of its giant financial competitors could manage.

Not only did it avoid the TARP bailout, but Prudential Financial was also able to quickly restore its dividend to pre-financial crisis levels once the worst of the storm passed. It cut its dividend in 2008 due to the crisis but had already recovered by 2010 -- and it has increased it regularly ever since. Today's dividend offers healthy yield of around 3.5%, but only represents a payout ratio around 19% of earnings. That indicates a high likelihood that the dividend will be maintained and may keep growing over time.

Prudential Financial manages to offer such an attractive income profile because it trades at a cheap valuation. At recent prices, it's available for around 0.9 times its book value and less than eight times its expected earnings -- earnings that are expected to grow by around 9% annually over the next five years. In addition, Prudential's balance sheet remains strong enough to maintain its "rock-solid" reputation, with a debt-to-equity ratio around 0.7 and substantial cash on hand to manage through a nasty surprise.

An infrastructure titan that has finally gotten its mojo back

Pipelines in the setting sun
Pipelines in the setting sun

Image source: Getty Images