4 Dividend Stocks to Double Up on Right Now

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You can pat yourself on the back if you're thinking of loading up your portfolio with dividend-paying stocks -- because they're surprisingly strong wealth builders. (If you weren't thinking of doing so, you can start now!)

Dividend payers aren't slouches. They're not sleepy stocks only suitable for grandparents. Plenty of high-performing growth stocks pay dividends -- such as Apple and Nvidia -- and though their dividend yields can be low sometimes, they can also be fast-growing. When you factor growing dividends into the total returns of slower-growing blue chip companies, they become much more compelling.

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Image source: Getty Images.

To appreciate the power of dividends, check out the eye-opening numbers below, adapted from a Hartford Funds report:

Dividend-Paying Status

Average Annual Total Return, 1973-2023

Dividend growers and initiators

10.19%

Dividend payers

9.17%

No change in dividend policy

6.74%

Dividend non-payers

4.27%

Dividend shrinkers and eliminators

(0.63%)

Equal-weighted S&P 500 index

7.72%

Data source: Ned Davis Research and Hartford Funds.

Here are four dividend payers to consider for your long-term stock portfolio:

1. Pfizer

Pfizer (NYSE: PFE) is a more familiar name than it was a few years ago, before people started lining up to receive Pfizer vaccines for COVID-19. But demand for vaccines has waned now, which has taken some wind out of Pfizer's sails. Still, there's a lot to like about this company.

Its COVID-19 vaccine and the related Paxlovid treatment are still generating more than $8 billion annually, and the company has a significant portfolio of drugs in development and on the market. It's expanded that via acquisition, too, such as how it greatly expanded its oncology business by buying Seagen. Note, too, that companies in the healthcare realm are more defensive than many others as healthcare spending is less optional during economic downturns.

What about Pfizer's dividend? Well, it recently yielded a fat 6.6%! And better still, its shares seem attractively valued, with a recent forward-looking price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 8.7, well below the five-year average of 10.7.

2. Medtronic

Medtronic (NYSE: MDT), a giant in medical devices, is another solid dividend payer with a recent yield of 3.2%. That payout has grown at an average annual rate of about 5% over the past five years -- and Medtronic has been upping its payout for 46-some years.

The stock hasn't been a fast grower in recent years, but as with all good dividend payers, investors get paid to wait for stronger-performing years to arrive. There's good reason to hope for that, too, as Medtronic has many new products in the offing, some of which can turn out to be blockbusters. The company recently had more than 190 active clinical trials, and has invested $2.7 billion in research and development for fiscal 2024.