3 Stocks to Supplement Your Social Security Income

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The average Social Security payment comes out to roughly $1,400 a month. That might not sound too bad, assuming you've stashed away some funds for your nonworking years. However, expenses can add up quickly and having other sources of income is key to getting the most out of your retirement.

Besides owning bonds and income-generating assets like real estate, retirees should consider building a portfolio of reliable, dividend-paying stocks that can provide another source of cash. Within that mold, AT&T (NYSE: T), Realty Income (NYSE: O), and Hanesbrands (NYSE: HBI) stand out as top investment vehicles to supplement your Social Security income.

A magnifying glass over three stacks of coins with plants sprouting from their tops.
A magnifying glass over three stacks of coins with plants sprouting from their tops.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. AT&T

AT&T's 6.2% yield and 33-year streak of annual dividend growth make it a top choice for generating extra income in retirement, and its central position in the communications industry should help it keep the payouts flowing. The company runs America's second-largest wireless network, is the country's largest pay-TV provider, and has recently become one of the world's leading entertainment companies thanks its merger with Time Warner.

AT&T remains a worthwhile dividend play even in light of cord-cutting trends and headwinds in the mobile service space. Jockeying among the company and its mobile wireless competitors Verizon, Sprint, and T-Mobile to deliver superior value is hurting pricing power.

The good news for AT&T is that it still has a strong brand, and demand for mobile data isn't going to decline. In fact, mobile data demand should actually increase as video streaming grows to account for more of the internet's data consumption, and technologies like augmented reality become more mainstream, requiring more-advanced service. The company is already adding new service connections for smart cars and smartwatches, and there's still plenty of room to grow in the broader Internet of Things category.

AT&T shares trade at roughly 9 times this year's expected earnings -- a valuation that presents an attractive entry point for retirees looking for a dependable dividend-paying stock. The cost of distributing its current payout comes in at roughly 70% of the $21 billion in free cash flow (FCF) that the company expects to generate in the current fiscal year -- a level that shouldn't prohibit additional payout increases. That $21 billion in expected FCF for this year also does not take into account the contribution from the Time Warner business. Based on the roughly $4.6 billion in FCF that Time Warner generated in 2017, the merger should improve the company's ability to cover its dividend and deliver payout growth -- just as it laid out when it first announced the merger.