Time to Buy the Dip on This 8.1% Hyper-Yield Dividend King?

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Most investors who buy Altria Group (NYSE: MO) stock aren't doing it in hopes of enjoying explosive share price gains. The stock has underperformed the S&P 500 for years. But the dividend? That's another story. Altria is a world-class dividend stock with a massive yield and a track record of payout hikes spanning more than five decades.

The Dividend King has shown some life this year. This month, the stock climbed above $56 to its highest price since early 2022 before retreating to around $50.

That pullback could make this a perfect buying opportunity for dividend-hungry investors looking for double-digit percentage annual investment returns.

Slow. Steady. Reliable.

Many investors view tobacco companies as the old guard of the stock market. U.S. smoking rates have declined for decades, and it's widely known how terrible tobacco use of any kind is for one's health. Altria, which sells cigarettes, chewing tobacco, and smokeless nicotine products in the United States, still gets the vast majority of its revenue and earnings from selling cigarettes. Marlboro is Altria's flagship brand.

But even today, people seemingly underestimate how resilient the tobacco industry is. The addictive nature of nicotine and high regulatory barriers to new industry entrants has allowed Altria to steadily raise its prices per pack, more than offsetting the fact that Altria sells fewer cigarettes each year.

The combination of those price increases and the company's share repurchases has been enough to generally increase Altria's free cash flow per share.

MO Free Cash Flow Per Share Chart
MO Free Cash Flow Per Share Chart

Nobody will mistake Altria for a high-growth business. Its earnings grow at low-single-digit percentage rates. The bottom line is that it continues to deliver slow and steady growth. Will that continue forever? Nobody can know for sure. However, there are no signs that it will stop soon. Analysts estimate Altria will grow earnings by just over 3% annually for the next three to five years.

This is no yield trap

A company's management team may be able to choose how much it pays in dividends, but it can't entirely control its dividend yield, because that depends on the stock price too. Sometimes, high yields can tempt investors -- they can look like easy money. However, a stock's dividend yield could be high because the market believes the company can't afford to maintain its payout at previous levels, or because other red flags drive down the share price.

In that context, high-yield stocks can prove to be bad investments, especially if the company cuts its dividend. Such low-quality stocks with high yields that are headed for payout cuts are sometimes called yield traps.