The Federal Reserve recently raised interest rates for the first time since 2018. While rising rates are good news for income investors, the Fed's planned incremental 0.25% hikes mean interest rates will likely remain historically low for at least several more quarters. In the meantime, income investors waiting for higher rates on bonds and savings can invest in high-yielding dividend stocks as a source of regular income. Most high-yield stocks pay quarterly dividends or distributions, but these monthly dividend stocks have at least 5% yields and make payments about once every four weeks. Pembina Pipeline Corp. (PBA) AGNC Investment Corp. (AGNC) Prospect Capital Corp. (PSEC) Main Street Capital Corp. (MAIN) LTC Properties Inc. (LTC) Broadmark Realty Capital Inc. (BRMK) Ellington Financial Inc. (EFC) EPR Properties (EPR)
Repost You have posted quite a few recommendations already. It is important that you monitor your performance. Are you tracking your performance? Based on those recommendations, are you profitable?
Pembina. Well, let me start off by saying you're the only person I recall pronouncing it as it is spelt. Every Canadian I know pronounces it as Pembeena. Kinda like with an Italian twist to it. But now you got me thinking, maybe Canadians are pronouncing their own companies wrong? That said, I really don't go for the 'dividend chasing strat'. It's just one small metric out of many other important things with a stock. That said, I do hold a few hundred shares I snatched up after the big sell off when oil prices went negative, and soon after Cathy Wood was on TV talking about how he NEW era is here where oil will be stuck at 6 dollars a barrel going forward. That said... you need to be careful with the companies you listed that have a higher than 100% payout ratio on their dividends! Please go back and re-study those financials. Anything over 100% is not sustainable.
I have always found these super high dividend stocks tend to drop like a rock. Look for something reasonable.
Of course. Mostly mREITs & Pipeline trusts. They will crash when interest rates go up or when WTI tanks as it will eventually when a recession comes. I've owned these in the past. mREITs like AGNC are the worst. 11% dividend and its down 12% YTD. Not very good: