Should You Buy the 3 Highest-Paying Dividend Stocks in the Nasdaq?

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The premise makes enough superficial sense — if you buy stocks with the highest dividend yields, you’ll collect the highest-possible dividend income. In fact, the theory may even be reality for a while.

As the old adage reminds us, though, there’s always more to the story. Your job as an investor is to identify and weigh any hidden cost or risk that’s yet to be realized.

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With that as the backdrop, before diving into the Nasdaq Composite‘s highest-paying dividend stocks simply because they’re dishing out the biggest dividend right now, here’s a closer look at each of them. You may well end up changing your mind before pulling the trigger.

Cutting straight to the chase, the Nasdaq’s highest-yielding names right now (excluding small caps and exchange-traded funds) are Icahn Enterprises (NASDAQ: IEP), AGNC Investment (NASDAQ: AGNC), and Torm PLC (NASDAQ: TRMD). Their forward-looking dividend yields currently stand at 16%, 15%, and 21%, respectively. Those are enormous numbers, particularly in comparison to the S&P 500‘s trailing dividend yield of 1.3%.

They’re also numbers investors can’t afford to count on.

Oh, that’s not to suggest you’ll never see this sort of yield on any capital you commit to any of these three names. You probably will, in fact, at least for a short while. These sorts of payouts aren’t likely to persist, though, and even if they do, your capital is put at an uncomfortable amount of risk in the meantime.

Take the aforementioned Icahn Enterprises as an example. The conglomerate steered by activist investor Carl Icahn has enjoyed a few moments of bullish brilliance since going public all the way back in 1987. But its lack of diversification has proven more problematic than not. It’s remained heavily invested in energy and automotive-related stocks, for instance, sticking with these holdings for too long at the wrong time. Not only are Icahn Enterprises shares back to where they were trading in 2004, but this stock’s dividend has been cut to a quarter of its early 2023 level as Icahn scrambles to play defense. It’s just too little, and too late.

It’s a tale of what can happen when a speculative approach to picking stocks suddenly — and without warning — stops working. AGNC Investment serves up the same lesson, albeit for completely different reasons.

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