It’s Time to Buy These 3 Dividend Aristocrats Trading Near 52-Week Lows

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If you’re a dividend investor, there is nothing more attractive than dividend aristocrats, those S&P 500 companies that have increased their annual dividend payment for 25 consecutive years or more.

A recent article about two dividend stocks trading near 52-week lows got me thinking about the dividend aristocrats and possible opportunities to buy them at or near 52-week lows.

There are 67 Dividend Aristocrats at the moment. I aim to find three of them trading within 5% of their 52-week lows. According to Finviz.com, 57 S&P 500 companies that fit this bill. Unfortunately, not all of them are Dividend Aristocrats.

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Not to worry. I found three large caps that are down but not out in 2023.

I don’t think there is any question that all three of these names should be on your watchlist for dividend-paying stocks worth owning for the long haul.

Dividend Aristocrats: Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)

A red Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) sign hangs inside in Moscow, Russia.
A red Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) sign hangs inside in Moscow, Russia.

Source: Alexander Tolstykh / Shutterstock.com

Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) is down nearly 18% year-to-date and 15% throughout the past 52 weeks. It is within 2% of its 52-week low of $144.95 as I write this. It hasn’t done much in the past five years, up less than 1%, considerably less than the 61% return of the index. On a total return basis, it’s generated a measly 2.94% annually.

This ought to be a lesson to dividend investors everywhere. It doesn’t matter that the company has increased its dividend for 61 straight years. The only thing that matters is total return, which is dividend yield plus capital appreciation. How you get that is irrelevant.

I haven’t paid close attention to JNJ recently, so I’m unfamiliar with why it’s gone off the rails so badly. In truth, it really hasn’t.

Earlier this year, it spun off its consumer health brands business into an independent, publicly traded company called Kenvue (NYSE:KVUE), which markets brands such as Tylenol, Aveeno, Band-Aid, etc.

Kenvue sold more than 172 million shares of its stock at $22. Johnson & Johnson retained 90% of the shares in Kenvue. In August, it completed an exchange offer with existing JNJ shareholders, who got eight shares in Kenvue stock for every share of JNJ exchanged. JNJ maintains a 9.5% interest in Kenvue.

More importantly, the company gained $13.2 billion from the spinoff, which it can use for acquisitions for its two remaining segments: Innovative Medicine and MedTech.

Yielding 3.2%, you get paid to wait for its shares to go on a run.

Chevron (CVX)

CVX stock
CVX stock

Source: tishomir / Shutterstock.com

I’m not a big oil and gas investor, but if you are considering an investment in the sector, you can’t get much better than Chevron (NYSE:CVX). It’s big and generates oodles of cash—$20.4 billion free cash flow in the trailing 12 months ended Sept. 30, 10% of its revenue of $202.5 billion.