These 4 Reopening Stocks Pay 4% to 10% (with 40%+ Upside) – Contrarian Outlook (2024)

Brett Owens, Chief Investment Strategist
Updated: March 19, 2021

As we Americans reemerge from our homes, select “return to normal” dividend payers are poised to deliver big gains. I’m talking about upside of 40% in addition to their 4% to 10% current yields.

But aren’t recovery stocks already expensive? We recently discussed how Americans aren’t exactly sleeping on the American vacation. The Invesco Dynamic Leisure and Entertainment ETF (PEJ), which includes restaurants, hotels, casinos and more, has gone skyward of late—and it’s not alone.

A quick look at some of the best ETFs over the past three months shows where investors believe the reopening money is heading:

These 4 Reopening Stocks Pay 4% to 10% (with 40%+ Upside) – Contrarian Outlook (1)

Unfortunately for income investors, these industries tend not to pay dividends. Travel tech? Sports gaming? Airlines, where payouts were suspended right and left? With the exception of energy, the recovery doesn’t look too lucrative for income-minded investors like us, does it?

But as always, we’ll simply dig deeper for our dividends. Our search rewards us with four recovery stocks paying between 4% and 10%.

Apartment Income REIT (AIRC)
Dividend Yield: 3.8%

Apartment Income REIT (AIRC) is easily the freshest face of this group, and one of the newest stocks on Wall Street.

In December 2020, Aimco (AIV), a Denver-based developer and redeveloper of apartment communities, separated its development and investing activities by spinning off the latter as AIRC. The resultant real estate investment trust (REIT) owns 93.5% of a portfolio of 98 “stabilized” properties totaling 26,599 apartment homes across a number of large markets, including Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, Boston and Miami.

A couple months later, and it started to take off like a rocket.

AIRC Is Off to a Hot Start
These 4 Reopening Stocks Pay 4% to 10% (with 40%+ Upside) – Contrarian Outlook (2)

AIRC, like the other stocks we’ll get through today, represents some facet of the “recovery/reopening” story. In this case, housing REITs are generally expected to fare better as their tenants regain financial stability. Not that Apartment Income is in a bad place—by the end of 2020, for instance, it had collected 98.3% of residential rents owed through the start of October.

However, its starting dividend of 43 cents quarterly and a quick run-up in shares equate to a fine-but-not-exactly-great dividend just south of 4%. And while its operations aren’t new, AIRC is only really starting to find its footing as an individual entity.

While it could be promising as a short-term trade, let AIRC establish a track record and see how its operations start to shape up compared to other coastal apartment REITs.

Brixmor Property Group (BRX)
Dividend Yield: 4.2%

Brixmor Property Group (BRX) boasts roughly 69 million square feet of retail space across nearly 400 open-air shopping centers in a few dozen states. The company boasts more than 5,000 tenants, with Walmart (WMT), Kroger (KR) and TJX Cos. (TJX) among the largest of those.

While several of those anchor stores remained open thanks to their “essential business” status, many of Brixmor’s other tenants weren’t so lucky. Shareholders knocked BRX shares down by nearly two-thirds during the worst of the downturn. The REIT suspended its quarterly cash dividend in May. And the stock has been slow to come up off the mat, only reaching pre-pandemic levels over the past month or so.

But things are starting to look up.

Brixmor resumed its dividend earlier this year; it’s a 21.5-cent quarterly payout that’s about 25% less than its old distribution, but payout growth is likely in the cards once business normalizes. Uncollected rents are still an issue, but BRX has set aside reserves for 70% of those and believe the rest will end up paid. Perhaps most interesting, however, is a line from Piper Sandler’s research team:

“While certain categories remain under pressure, BRX is seeing demand from new concepts, including restaurants, which shows how the real issue is the curtailment of businesses by government regulations, not necessarily business model.”

In other words, when more states feel comfortable pulling off the guardrails, Brixmor might have even more runway to go. The fact that it’s decently priced at less than 13 times 2021 FFO projections (versus sky-high prices for much of the rest of the market) also helps.

Gaming & Leisure Properties (GLPI)
Dividend Yield: 5.9%

Gaming & Leisure Properties (GLPI) is a casino and gaming REIT, but it’s certainly not just a Vegas play. GLPI’s portfolio of roughly 50 assets is spread across 16 states, from Colorado to Louisiana to Ohio to Maine.

Just like Brixmor, Gaming & Leisure Properties suffered mightily from COVID lockdowns. Every one of its tenants was forced to close for at least some period of time. The stock plunged by as much as 70%. GLPI cut its dividend, but only by a little more than 14%, to 65 cents per share.

GLPI Is Only Now Approaching Its Pre-Pandemic Peak
These 4 Reopening Stocks Pay 4% to 10% (with 40%+ Upside) – Contrarian Outlook (3)

But despite the stock panic, GLPI’s operations frankly weren’t all that bad. Consider that in Q2 and Q3 2020, just one of its tenants (Casino Queen) failed to remain current with respect to their rental obligations, and by Q4, Casino Queen had paid up. “We collected all rent that was due in 2020,” the REIT said in its Q4 release.

Shorter-term, most in the industry expect a flood from pent-up demand. Wynn Resorts (WYNN) CEO Matt Maddox has said “I think it will be similar to the Roaring Twenties after the pandemic of 1918 and 1919.” But GLPI might be just as attractive longer-term as an increasing number of states legalize gambling to help replenish their coffers.

For now, you can buy that potential—and a nearly 6% yield—for roughly 13 times 2021 AFFO estimates. Not bad.

Antero Midstream (AM)
Dividend Yield: 10.3%

Antero Midstream (AM) was formed back in 2012 to hold and develop energy infrastructure to help service Antero Resources’ (AR) growing natural gas and natural gas liquid (NGL) production. It owns more than 370 miles of gathering pipelines, as well as compression stations, fractionation plants, and even freshwater pipelines and storage, in the Marcellus and Utica shales. The firm also has a 50/50 joint venture with MPLX LP (MLPX).

When most people think about the rebound in energy over the past few months, they mostly think about the spike in oil prices, which is coming amid expectations for renewed personal and industrial demand. But there’s also been a (less consistent) recovery in natural gas prices, which has helped to buoy the likes of Antero Midstream and other nat-gas infrastructure plays.

Antero (AM) Has Outstripped Its Energy and MLP Peers
These 4 Reopening Stocks Pay 4% to 10% (with 40%+ Upside) – Contrarian Outlook (4)

But do you notice that large, rapid dip in February?

That came on the heels of an interesting fourth-quarter report in which AM provided higher guidance for 2021 EBITDA… but cut its dividend by 27%.

You’ll notice AM has since filled that gap, too. Perhaps investors have realized that there are some upsides to paring back its still-high payout; Antero will be able to invest more in capex and spur greater growth going forward.

Still, Antero Midstream is at best fairly valued at current prices, and there are much more direct ways to chase down continued gains in energy prices, be they nat gas or oil. And most of them aren’t a month removed from pulling the rug out from under shareholders.

Sky-High Dividends You Can Count on for DECADES

The rub with a company like Antero is that you’re leaving your retirement income up to the whims of the energy market.

You’ve seen how many times oil prices have swung hard over the past decade. You’ve seen the dozens upon dozens of companies that have killed their dividends—or worse, went under.

That’s not a path to a prosperous, restful retirement.

But my “Perfect Income” portfolio is.

High-quality, high-yield dividends have been hard to find for years. A number of supposedly “blue chip” dividends went belly-up in 2020. And the subsequent rally in stocks has driven yields into the ground. Even if you had a million dollars in cash to plunk down right now, the S&P 500 would earn you just $15,000 a year! A traditional 60/40 portfolio wouldn’t do much better!

Forget about retiring happily on that level of income. You can’t even survive on it!

Thankfully, the dividend-rich stocks in my “Perfect Income Portfolio” can and do deliver so much more.

Most of my readers have told me that these stocks have doubled and even tripled the dividends they were earnings from their old income portfolios. (And in a couple of rare cases, readers reported a 4x jump in their regular checks!) That alone is an upgrade, but the Perfect Income Portfolio delivers that level of cash while also …

  • Paying those dividends consistently, predictably and reliably.
  • Surviving, even thriving, in market crashes.
  • Delivering double-digit returns across several safe investments.
  • Gambling your hard-earned nest egg on flimsy day-trading strategies, options contracts or penny stocks.

That sounds pretty perfect to me. But you tell me what you think:

These 4 Reopening Stocks Pay 4% to 10% (with 40%+ Upside) – Contrarian Outlook (5)

Stop obsessively staring at your 401(k) or IRA while it yo-yos up and down. You don’t need to pray to the Federal Reserve to keep your retirement hopes alive.

Instead, just let me show you the stocks and funds you need to stabilize your retirement … and even teach you more about this incredible strategy itself, so you better understand exactly what you’re investing in.

Heck, I’ll even let other investors tell you about the wealth they’ve built using my research service.

Take control of your financial legacy today. Let me show you how to get 2x to 4x your current income with this simple, straightforward system. Click here to get a FREE copy of my Perfect Income Portfolio report, including tickers, dividend yields, full analyses of each pick … and a few other bonuses!

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Should I put all my money in dividend stocks? ›

Dividend investing can be a great investment strategy. Dividend stocks have historically outperformed the S&P 500 with less volatility. That's because dividend stocks provide two sources of return: regular income from dividend payments and capital appreciation of the stock price. This total return can add up over time.

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Dividend ETFs or index funds offer investors access to a selection of dividend stocks within a single investment — that means with just one transaction, you can own a portfolio of dividend stocks. The fund will then pay you dividends on a regular basis, which you can take as income or reinvest.

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How much to invest to get $100 a month in dividends? ›

If you want to generate $100 in super safe monthly dividend income in the new year, simply invest $11,925 (split equally, three ways) into the following three high-yield stocks, which are averaging a 10.07% yield!

What is the best dividend stock to buy right now? ›

10 Best Dividend Stocks to Buy
  • Verizon Communications VZ.
  • Johnson & Johnson JNJ.
  • Altria Group MO.
  • Comcast CMCSA.
  • Medtronic MDT.
  • Duke Energy DUK.
  • PNC Financial Services PNC.
  • Kinder Morgan KMI.
5 days ago

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How much dividend stock do I need to make $1000 a month? ›

In a market that generates a 2% annual yield, you would need to invest $600,000 up front in order to reliably generate $12,000 per year (or $1,000 per month) in dividend payments.

How much to make $500 a month in dividends? ›

With a 10% yield and monthly payout schedule, you can get to $500 a month with only $60,000 invested. That is, $6,000 per year paid on a monthly basis. Unfortunately, most stocks don't have yields anywhere near 10%. Many do have high enough yields to get you to $500 a month with diligent savings, but don't pay monthly.

What is the highest paying dividend stock that pays monthly? ›

Top 10 Highest-Yielding Monthly Dividend Stocks in 2022
  • ARMOUR Residential REIT – 20.7%
  • Orchid Island Capital – 17.8%
  • AGNC Investment – 14.8%
  • Oxford Square Capital – 13.7%
  • Ellington Residential Mortgage REIT – 13.2%
  • SLR Investment – 11.5%
  • PennantPark Floating Rate Capital – 10%
  • Main Street Capital – 7%

Is Contrarian investing good? ›

Being a contrarian can be rewarding, but it is often a risky strategy that may take a long period of time to pay off. Another drawback associated with being a contrarian investor is the need to spend a good deal of time researching stocks to find undervalued opportunities.

Is contrarian trading profitable? ›

Contrarian traders can profit from these reversals by taking positions in the opposite direction of the prevailing trend. Go against Herd Mentality: Contrarian trading helps traders to go against the herd mentality that often leads to bubbles and market crashes.

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It gives you access to around 20 of our Stansberry Research publications. To subscribe to all of these newsletters and trading services individually would cost over $37,000.

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Stocks and mutual funds that distribute dividends are generally on sound financial ground, but not always. Stocks that pay dividends typically provide stability to a portfolio but may not outperform high-quality growth stocks.

Is there a downside to dividend stocks? ›

Another potential downside of investing primarily for dividends is the chance for a disconnect between the business growth of a company and the amount of dividends the company pays. Common stocks are not required to pay dividends. A company can cut its dividend at any time.

Are monthly dividend stocks worth it? ›

Monthly dividend stocks can provide predictable income and make budgeting easy since they pay dividends every month of the year. While most companies pay dividends quarterly, there are 80 stocks that pay dividends monthly. And many of them have high dividend yields above 7%.

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