Want More Passive Income in 2025? Consider This ETF and 2 Rock-Solid Dividend Stocks.

In This Article:

The S&P 500 notched a rip-roaring 53.2% gain in the two-year period from 2023 through 2024. Passive income collected from most dividend stocks during this period pales in comparison to the capital gains of the broader market.

The best way to approach investing in dividend stocks isn't to try to keep pace with a red-hot rally, but rather to invest in balanced companies that have the potential to grow earnings over time and, in turn, their payouts to investors. The advantages of dividend stocks are put on display when the broader market is having a mediocre or down year. In those cases, income earned from dividend stocks or dividend-paying exchange-traded funds (ETFs) can effectively supplement income in retirement or provide some extra dry powder to reinvest in the market.

Here's why Honeywell International (NASDAQ: HON), American Electric Power (NASDAQ: AEP), and the Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSEMKT: XLE) are three excellent buys for 2025.

A person stacking stones in increasingly taller towers.
Image source: Getty Images.

Honeywell is finally giving investors something to smile about

Daniel Foelber (Honeywell): Honeywell checks most boxes for stocks to buy in 2025. The industrial conglomerate has a diversified business in aerospace, industrial and building automation, Industrial Internet of Things, energy and sustainability solutions, and more.

The stock has a reasonable valuation, with a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 26.2 and a forward P/E ratio of just 20.6. And Honeywell has 14 consecutive years of dividend raises and a yield of 2% -- which is above the S&P 500 yield of 1.3% and the 1.1% yield of the Vanguard Industrials ETF, which tracks the industrial sector.

However, Honeywell doesn't have a recent track record for growth or a clearly defined runway for future growth. Despite focusing on bridging the gap between industrial equipment and software, Honeywell has failed to achieve meaningful earnings growth. Diluted earnings per share is up just 58.6% in the last decade and revenue is down during that period. Honeywell has expanded its operating margins, but still the growth has been largely disappointing.

Honeywell's solution has been to make a flurry of acquisitions to accelerate growth. The acquisitions could take time to pay off, and have come at a cost, as Honeywell's balance sheet has become more leveraged -- with debt-to-capital and financial debt-to-equity ratios at all-time highs.

Following a wave of break-ups across the industrial sector, Honeywell is now considering spinning off its aerospace segment, which could unlock value by improving the pace of innovation. We'll know a lot more when Honeywell reports fourth-quarter and full-year 2024 earnings in late January or early February. However, splitting the company into more focused businesses could finally help Honeywell move closer to becoming an industrial technology company and less of a legacy stalwart.