These 3 Dividend Stocks Are Built Different

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Stock market operations

getty

“Why are they interviewing this guy? He doesn’t know… anything.”

I paused the Netflix
NFLX
pseudo-documentary and searched for a quick, thoughtful response to my wife. As the resident investment strategist of the house, my reputation was on the line.

“The dude made a lot of money on GameStop

GME
(GME)
. I think. Or he lost a lot. They’ll tell us at the end.”

Eat the Rich: The GameStop Saga is a fast, fun watch. You will remember the story:

  • Hedge funds were massively short GME (more than 100% of its shares were sold short).
  • Internet bros and gals learned this and started buying.
  • Hedge fund Melvin Capital got squeezed and failed entirely.
  • Robinhood (HOOD) removed its buy button for GME, allegedly (and c’mon, probably) due to pressure from Citadel Securities… which was deeply invested and in bed with other hedge funds short GME.
  • The little guys who held on lost everything.

We’re evoking the tale of GME today because we have a high-quality dividend stock that is currently:

  1. Making new 52-week highs.
  2. Heavily shorted.

In a washed out market that is poised to pop, this payer could fly.

Here are the names, tickers and yields of these three star bear market students.

Heritage Financial (HFWA)

Dividend Yield: 3.2%

2022 hasn’t been kind toward the broader financial sector, though regional banks have generally absorbed less punishment than megabanks and other diversified financials. It makes sense—they do benefit from being able to charge higher interest rates on products, but they’re not weighed down by other businesses such as flailing trading desks.

But Heritage Financial (HFWA) has been particularly resilient, posting gains in the high single digits while the regional bank index has slumped by 15%.

Heritage Financial is the holding company responsible for Heritage Bank, a community bank with 50 locations in Washington state and Oregon. Fare is pretty typical: consumer products such as savings and checking accounts, credit cards and home loans; business lending; and wealth management solutions.

HFWA stands to be among the biggest beneficiaries of rising rates; loans have grown at a double-digit clip so far this year; and the bank boasts an extremely low-cost deposit base. KBW analysts also note that Heritage is bringing on additional talent to take advantage of market disruption in the Pacific Northwest.

Meanwhile, HFWA trades at an attractive 11.8 times earnings estimates—roughly in line with the financial sector and well cheaper than the S&P 500’s 16.2. The 3%-plus dividend yield is good, not great. But the dividend growth is where we want to see it—a roughly 10% clip over the past five years—and it frequently tops up its quarterly distribution with a small special dividend.

Unum Group (UNM)

Dividend Yield: 3.4%

In February, I pointed out that insurer Unum Group (UNM) was being overlooked by the market.

That wasn’t the case for long.

Admittedly, Unum is something of a specialist: It’s a top disability insurer in both the U.S. and the U.K., and it also provides life, critical illness and accident insurance.

The wind in Unum’s sails has been persistently high employment and rising wages, which have organically improved the company’s premiums. Lower benefit ratios have also helped profit growth. As a result, UNM has managed to scorch operational estimates this year, sending shares to market-obliterating returns.

UNM has rewarded investors with a 10% dividend hike this year, soundly above its 7.5% five-year CAGR, so it still yields roughly twice the S&P despite its blistering run.

The price is great, too, but it’s fair to ask whether UNM is a value, or just cheap. Shares trade hands at a dirt-cheap 6.3 times earnings estimates—extremely uninspiring earnings estimates. While Unum should close 2022 out with a 41% jump in profits, expectations for 2023’s bottom line are virtually flat year-over-year.

Multiple expansion could still do some heavy lifting, but meaningful growth might be asking too much.

Cal-Maine Foods

CALM
(CALM)

Dividend Yield: 3.1%

Now, Cal-Maine Foods (CALM) is exactly the kind of company you’d expect to see flying high in this kind of environment. It’s a consumer staples play—an egg farmer that’s responsible for about a quarter of the eggs Americans consume.

While there are a lot of things in the kitchen you can substitute or go without when things get tight, eggs aren’t really one of those—demand tends to stay constant regardless of what prices do.

And in 2022, prices have been going through the roof.

Inflation has done its fair share of damage, sure. But a severe outbreak of avian influenza killed millions of hens this year, throwing a monkey wrench into production.

Higher egg prices have meant higher stock prices for CALM shares, which have raced ahead by nearly 50% so far this year. And despite that run, the stock still has a little valuation appeal, sporting a forward P/E of 15.9 versus the market’s 16.2.

Another less expected source of potential returns? As discussed, a short squeeze! CALM’s brisk chart run has much of Wall Street betting against the egg producer; more than 13% of Cal-Maine’s shares outstanding are currently sold short—typically, anything over 10% is worth watching.

Defensive? Yes. A potential short-squeeze candidate? Yes. But a long-term income play? Not so much. CALM has a variable dividend—so variable, in fact, that the company pays out zero cash in some quarters.

Brett Owens is chief investment strategist for Contrarian Outlook. For more great income ideas, get your free copy his latest special report: Your Early Retirement Portfolio: Huge Dividends—Every Month—Forever.

Disclosure: none

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