11 Boring Stocks That Pay Dividends

In This Article:

In this article, we will take a look at the 11 boring stocks that pay dividends. To see more such companies, go directly to 5 Boring Stocks That Pay Dividends.

The 2022 market crash and the broader retreat of growth stocks has established one thing: boring is better when it comes to stock investing during volatile times. The euphoric optimism that started after the pandemic on the back of easy money and sky-high valuations abruptly ended in 2022 with painful losses for growth investors who were betting on exciting, flashy tech companies whose profits lie far into the future. On the other hand, so-called “boring” companies which hardly make daily headlines in stock market news, trade on realistic valuations and generate a lot of cash selling stuff that remains important for people took all the limelight during the year. This value outperformance is expected to continue in 2023 as well as financial markets continue to face the effects of rising inflation, increasing interest rates and geopolitical uncertainty.

Earlier this year, Bloomberg quoted Goldman Sachs analyst Peter Oppenheimer, who said that value stocks are expected to outperform growth stocks in 2023 as “big cap technology sees further margin pressure, commodity prices rise and real interest rates remain higher.” Oppenheimer is just one of the many famous investors who were calling for a major tech stocks rout. Morgan Stanley’s famous bear Mike Wilson, who got fame for foreseeing the stock market crash of 2022, also said in March that he was seeing a further 20% downside on some major tech and meme stocks.

In January, Wilson said that he was expecting a “nasty earnings recession and the companies that can deliver on cost efficiency will be the ones that can continue to perform.”

Which companies can deliver on cost efficiency? You guessed it right. Boring companies that make money. Boring companies with prudent business models, realistic valuations and years of dividend growth will be our focus in this article today because these are the companies that are expected to deliver well despite the financial crunch and recession which could last for months or years to come.

During the start of 2023, the US stock market showed signs of a rebound based on hopes that inflation in the country might be getting under control and the Federal Reserve was on path to pause rate hikes. However, subsequent weeks dashed these hopes as data showed the resilience of the labor market and stubborn inflation. However, an important question to ask is: will value stocks continue to perform well if the stock market starts to rebound in the second half of 2023? Is this the right time to pile into boring value stocks? Last year, Northern Trust published some interesting data points citing Chief Investment Officer for Global Equities Michael Hunstad. These data points may answer this question.