2 High-Yield Dividend Stocks I Can’t Stop Buying

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High-yield dividend stocks have been gaining momentum ahead of potential Fed rate cuts. While sticky inflation and possible Trump-era tariffs could complicate the Fed’s plans, several blue-chip dividend powerhouses like AT&T and Altria have been outperforming the S&P 500 this year.

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Two high-yield stocks keep drawing my investment dollars in this market. Here’s why these two high-yield dividend stocks deserve a closer look from income and value investors with a long-term outlook.

A makeshift sign that reads dividends with coin jar and a stack of U.S. dollars in the background.
Image Source: Getty Images.

Pfizer (NYSE: PFE) ranks among healthcare’s most reliable dividend payers, but recent struggles have pushed its stock down 13.8% this year. That decline has lifted the yield to an enticing 6.77% while dropping its valuation to just 8.3 times forward earnings. As a result, the drugmaker now offers the highest yield among major drug manufacturers and one of the lowest multiples in the space.

Wall Street’s skepticism centers primarily on Pfizer’s recent acquisition frenzy. The company has racked up $68 billion in debt by buying a host of next-generation drug developers, but some of these deals have already turned sour. For example, Pfizer recently withdrew the sickle cell disease drug Oxbryta from the market, which was the centerpiece of its $5.4 billion acquisition of Global Blood Therapeutics in 2022.

Adding fuel to the fire, markets have also grown nervous about President-elect Trump’s potential nomination of vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services. While the potential impact on drug and vaccine approvals remains uncertain, investors have reacted negatively to the possibility.

Despite these headwinds, Pfizer’s pivot to oncology is starting to pay dividends. Cancer treatments drove a healthy amount of last quarter’s 32% year-over-year operational growth, and the recent Seagen acquisition added a deep pipeline of promising therapies. Moreover, the drugmaker’s $4 billion cost-cutting program should help the deleveraging process and support future dividend payments.

With shares trading near historic lows and its dividend yield hovering around a record high, I see a bargain hiding in plain sight. While the debt load demands attention, and savvier business development deals would be nice, Pfizer’s deep pipeline and growing cancer franchise make its 6.77% yield worth the risk, in my opinion.

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