Seeking up to 8% Dividend Yield? Jefferies Suggests 2 Dividend Stocks to Buy

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Investors are always looking for high returns, and right now the signs are lining up in favor of the high-yield dividend segment. Dividend payments ensure a regular income stream, regardless of market conditions, while high yields offer the potential for solid returns on investment.

The dividend stocks are also favorites of defensive investors, tending to be less volatile during market ups and downs. That’s an important point right now – even though the consensus wisdom is suggesting that we’ll see an economic soft landing, there is still a chance of an economic downturn.

This background has informed a recent note from Desh Peramunetilleke, head of Microstrategy at investment bank Jefferies, who points toward high-yield dividend stocks as sound choices given today’s conditions.

“After a challenging 2023,” the Jefferies team says, “the outlook for dividend strategies has improved. Fed is increasingly leaning towards June being the first cut, indicating that growth will become a bigger challenge than inflation. However, given that a hard-landing is unlikely, ultra-defensive bond-proxies could continue to struggle. Instead, we find high-quality yield as best-placed to capture the cycle.”

Jefferies’ Omar Nokta, a 5-star analyst rated in the top 4% of the Street’s stock pros, has followed this line of thought with several specific picks – tagging 2 high-yielding dividend stocks as buys, choices that should return up to 8% dividend yield. We’ve used the TipRanks database to get the broader view of these stocks, and found that they’ve earned Strong Buy consensus ratings. Here are the details

DHT Holdings (DHT)

We’ll start with a tanker company, DHT Holdings. This firm is one of the independent operators in the global oceanic transport sector, specializing in the carriage of crude oil. DHT’s name is the acronym for ‘double hull tankers,’ a modern mode of tanker construction designed to promote safety and prevent leaks. The company is a pure-play operator of VLCC’s, or ‘very large crude carriers,’ massive tankers with rated in the range of 299,000 to 320,000 dry weight tonnage (DWT). These are the largest of the crude tankers plying the oceans today.

DHT’s fleet of 28 VLCCs is wholly owned by the company and operated primarily on a charter basis. The prevalence of long-term charter contracts in the company’s operations model gives DHT a high level of reliable fixed income.

Fleet quality is a vital factor for oceanic tanker companies, and DHT has a relatively young fleet. All but 4 of its vessels were built in 2011 or later, with the 5 youngest vessels afloat having been built in 2018. The company’s fleet comprises a total of 28 VLCCs, including 4 tankers for which the company has recently entered into building agreements. These 4 vessels are to be built at South Korean shipyards and will gross 320,000 DWT each. Each ship has an average price of $128,500,000 and will be delivered in 2026.