3 Top Dividend Stocks With Yields Over 5%

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It's been shown that dividend-paying stocks outperform non-dividend paying stocks, but not just any dividend stock deserves a spot in your portfolio. Investing in high dividend-paying stocks can be especially tricky because sometimes, high yields are the result of struggles that are weighing down shares prices. To help investors avoid the risk of buying a high-yield stock at the wrong time, we asked three Motley Fool investors what stocks are on their radar for income portfolios. In their view, the time is right to buy Baldwin & Lyons (NASDAQ: BWINB), HCP, Inc. (NYSE: HCP), and AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T)

A specialty insurer on sale

Todd Campbell (Baldwin & Lyons): OK. You got me. I rounded up. Baldwin & Lyons' dividend yield of 4.8% is a little below the 5% cut off, but there's a reason I think this small-cap dividend stock could be a good fit for income investors willing to take on some risk.

A man sits on a floor with paper currency falling around him.
A man sits on a floor with paper currency falling around him.

IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

Here's what I like about it.

Baldwin & Lyons is a property & casualty insurer that's been around since 1930. Its insurance products focus on the transportation industry, including buses and commercial trucking. It also offers worker's compensation insurance.

The company's been expanding its distribution strategy, and that's translating into more policies being written. It's also earning more money on its investment portfolio because of rising interest rates. Its gross premiums written increased 37.5% year over year to $144.2 million in Q4 2017, and in 2017, it's full-year EPS was $1.21.

As a reminder, while insurers wait to pay out claims, they pocket dividends and gains on investments made with their premium revenue. Since interest rates on short-term bonds climb as the Fed hikes rates and the company writes more business, the current environment should offer some profit-friendly tailwinds. For instance, net investment income increased 42% in Q4 2017 from Q4 2016 and it grew 25% year over year for the full year 2017.

An argument can also be made that this company's stock is cheap right now. Last year, the company needed to increase its reserves to put it in a better financial position, and that has kept investors at bay. As a result, you can buy shares for less than 1 times sales and 1 times book value. That's historically low for this stock.

BWINB Price to Book Value Chart
BWINB Price to Book Value Chart

BWINB Price to Book Value data by YCharts.

That said, there are some things that worry me about this stock. First, not a lot of shares change hands every day, and that means its shares could be volatile. Second, writing more policies is only a good thing if you do the underwriting correctly, and that's not a given.