2 No-Brainer Dividend Stocks to Buy Right Now for Less Than $500

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Turnaround situations can be very risky, but not all of them. That’s the big picture story when you look at real estate investment trust (REIT) W.P. Carey (NYSE: WPC) and Canadian financial giant Toronto-Dominion Bank (NYSE: TD). Both of these high-yield stocks has fallen on hard times, but neither is facing a situation that should lead to their ultimate demise.

In fact, there are good reasons to think both will be seeing better times ahead. If you have $500 or even $5,000, you should take a look at them today while Wall Street is still downbeat on their shares.

As 2024 got underway, W.P. Carey shareholders were greeted with a reduction in the quarterly dividend, which dropped from roughly $1.07 per share to $0.86. That reduction came just as the REIT would have hit 25 consecutive annual dividend increases, so it was likely a bit of a shock for some investors.

Don’t let this dividend cut dissuade you from buying W.P. Carey. It was really a reset that positions the company for a brighter future. At the end of 2023, W.P. Carey made the hard choice to exit the office sector in one quick move instead of continuing to slowly reduce its exposure, as it had been doing for years.

Image source: Getty Images.

The reason for the change of tactic is that the office sector is facing material headwinds today following the work-from-home trend that took off during the COVID-19 pandemic. This decision likely saved investors from having to deal with years of slow and steady write-offs as office properties bought years ago were sold at a loss.

The move also strengthened W.P. Carey’s overall portfolio, which is now focused on industrial, warehouse, and retail properties. These are areas that are likely to be more attractive over the long term than office properties. And the office exit left W.P. Carey with material liquidity (in the form of cash and lines of credit) to put to work buying more of the attractive assets on which it is now focused.

All of this suggests that growth will pick up in 2025, given that it will take time for management to put its available cash to work.

The strong opportunity ahead is highlighted by the fact that the dividend started growing again the quarter after the reset and has actually returned to the same quarterly-increase cadence that existed prior to the reset. If the dividend reset were made from a position of weakness, management wouldn’t have started to hike the payment again so soon.

If you think in decades and not days, W.P. Carey and its 6.2% dividend yield is an attractive, low-risk turnaround opportunity.

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