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DOC, VZ, APAM: 6% Dividend-Yielding Bargains to Buy Now

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The average dividend yield of the 503 stocks in the S&P 500 is 1.3%. That makes it difficult to find high-yield dividend stocks to buy.

According to Finviz.com, there are 10 stocks in the index, yielding 6% or more. Not all 10 are bargains. Some, like Walgreens Boots Alliance (NASDAQ:WBA), might be considered “value traps” by many investors even after falling 42% in 2024.

Nonetheless, of the 9 remaining stocks yielding 6%, I don’t think there’s any doubt at least three are bargains despite such a high yield.

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If you expand the search to all U.S.-listed stocks yielding 6% or more and a market capitalization over $2 billion, the field widens to 141. It is from here I will select three high-yield dividend stocks to buy.

To make things interesting, I’ll pick one from the S&P 500, one from the Dow Jones Industrial Average and one from the Russell 2000.

Healthpeak Properties (DOC)

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Amazon

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Healthpeak Properties (NYSE:DOC) is a healthcare-focused REIT (real estate investment trust) based in Denver. Its annual dividend rate of $1.20 yields 6.2%.

On March 1, the REIT completed its all-stock merger of equals with Physicians Realty Trust. The transaction valued the combined companies at $21 billion. Shareholders received 0.674 Healthpeak shares per Physicians Realty Trust share.

Physicians brought to the table an internal property management platform and established industry relationships. It expects the merged entity to generate up to $60 million in annual synergies by the end of 2025.

The combined REIT has 52 million square feet of healthcare space, including one of the largest outpatient medical portfolios with 40 million in high-growth markets and affiliated with leading hospitals and health systems. Its top three markets are San Francisco, Boston and Dallas, with 13.7 million square feet.

Its balance sheet is top-notch, with just $1.7 billion of its long-term debt maturing before 2028. The weighted average interest rate of its $8.73 billion in total debt (not including lease liabilities) is a reasonable 3.8%.

On the same day it closed its merger, the company obtained a new $750 million, 5-year unsecured term loan with a fixed interest rate of 4.5% for the entire period. Its net debt is just 5.2x its adjusted EBITDA.

Verizon Communications (VZ)

Verizon Wireless sign and trademark logo.
Verizon Wireless sign and trademark logo.

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Admittedly, I prefer T-Mobile U.S. (NASDAQ:TMUS) to either Verizon Communications (NYSE:VZ) or AT&T (NYSE:T). However, of the two biggest, Verizon is a better buy than AT&T.