Letâs kick off 2024 with great news: despite the Santa Claus rally, there are still some sweet dividend deals on the boardâmany hiding in plain sight.
In a second, weâll name names and dive into my 2024 outlook, including my forecast for a 2024 recession and exactly what weâre going to be looking for in dividend payers (and growers) this year.
First, letâs tee up 2024 by reviewing the game tape from the last quarter of â23.
Buying Fear Drove Fast Double-Digit Gains in Late â23
Readers of my Contrarian Income Report service will recognize the Gabelli Dividend & Income Trust (GDV), one of the picks we grabbed when panic was running high in October.
I bring up GDV because the fundâa closed-end fund (CEF) run by legendary value investor Mario Gabelliâholds blue chips you can set your watch to, like Mastercard (MA), JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) and Microsoft (MSFT).
When we snagged it on October 6, it yielded a sweet 6.9%. Just under three months later, weâre sitting on a 14% total return (including three dividend payouts, as GDV pays monthly). This is why we always buy our blue chips through CEFs, not ETFs.
Where does that leave us?
To be sure, thereâs still plenty of optimism out there, and thatâs taken some dividend deals off the table (with a few of our Contrarian Income Report holdingsâincluding GDVâflipping from âbuysâ to âholds in recent days). But as I said, there are still some deals to be had, as well.
The âRecession-Resistantâ Payers Weâll Aim for in â24
At the top of our list? Stocks with growing dividends, which tend to pull their share prices higher over time, despite recessions, inflation, geopolitical messes or whatever. We also want companies with an edge that bolsters them in a recession, which I expect later this year.
Those ârecession-resistantâ strengths include strengths like reliable revenues from, say, rent payments or customers who must buy their services no matter what. Our first stock is a good example.
2024 âDividend Dealâ #1: The âEnergizer Bunnyâ of Payout Growth
WEC Energy Group (WEC), which we last wrote about on September 6 here on Contrarian Outlook, sports a fast-growing dividend that continues to hold our attention. On December 20, management said it plans to declare a 7% payout hike in Januaryâthe new rate will be payable on March 1 to shareholders of record on February 14.
The increase will mark WECâs 21st straight year of hikes, putting it on track to move into the vaunted âDividend Aristocratsâ club in 2028.
WEC, is a Midwestern utility with 4.6 million power and gas customers in Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan and Minnesota. Itâs also making big moves in renewable power, with nearly 3,500 megawattsâ worth in the pipeline.
The 2024 hike will add to a payout that does nothing but grow, having more than doubled in the past decade!
WECâs Dividend Magnet doesnât only have a pull on the share priceâit has a pull on us, too, for a couple of reasons:
- It shakes off whatever the economy is doing: Global pandemic? Inflation? High rates? Low rates? Take another look at the chart above: WECâs payout stair-steps higher no matter what.
- Its price is âgappingâ its dividend: You can see that WECâs share price (in purple above) hardly ever falls behind its payout growth (in orange). And when it does, it stays there for a very short time. That makes todayâs gap unusualâand worth looking at before the purple line jumps over the orange one again.
Hereâs a third reason why WEC has our attention: itâs yielding 3.73% as I write this, just below the 3.98% it hit in October 2023, which itself was a high not seen since 2000.
That gives us a high âbaseâ to start from on a buy made today, as WEC continues growing its payout. The yield on a buy made today, at WECâs historically high yield, would result in a roughly 8.6% yield on that purchase in 2034.
We have every reason to believe that will happen, as the payout is well-supported. In the companyâs latest dividend announcement, executive chairman Gale Klappa said the new payout lines up with WECâs plan to pay out 65% to 70% of earnings as dividendsâsafe for a company with steady revenue like WEC.
2024 âDividend Dealâ #2: A 453% Payout Grower Thatâs a âStealthâ AI Play
Essex Property Trust (ESS) is another stock we last brought to your attention on Contrarian Outlook in Septemberâthe 19th, to be precise. And like WEC, itâs back on our radar again, this time because itâs doing what we said it would: handing out some spectacular growth, with its price jumping some 16% since.
Thatâs started to close the gap between the firmâs share price and dividend growth.
But not to worryâthereâs still room to get in on the 3.7%-paying REIT, which owns more than 62,000 apartment units in California and Washington State. Itâs an indirect play on two megatrends sweeping its tech-powered markets:
- Surging AI investment, driving a jump in venture-capital funding in the Bay Area.
- The (partial) return to the office, as more firms, like Salesforce (CRM), Apple (AAPL), Meta (META), Amazon.com (AMZN) and Alphabet (GOOGL), now require staff to be in the office at least three days a week.
In effect, Essex is a savvy way for us to use real estateâand the income it providesâto tap into IT trends like AI, network security and EVsâEssex has a presence in Fremont, home to a Tesla (TSLA) factory.
Not to mention tech trends you rarely hear about. Remember cloud computing? Itâs still out there, and surging: according to research firm Mordor Intelligence, itâll post a compounded annualized growth rate of 16.4% from 2023 to 2028.
Those forces are supporting Essexâs cash flowâand dividend. History is also on our side with the payout, which has grown yearly for 29 straight years, putting Essex where WEC is headed: among the Dividend Aristocrats.
Another thing we like about Essex is managementâs iron grip on costs. To be sure, operating expenses have risen for Essex (and everyone else!) these past couple years. But Essex consistently tops its peers in cost-control, and its lead has been growing:
Finally, the dividend is safe, with management boosting the midpoint of forecast 2023 core FFO to $15.00; the annualized quarterly payout accounts for a comfortable (for a REIT) 61% of that.
Brett Owens is chief investment strategist for Contrarian Outlook. For more great income ideas, get your free copy his latest special report: Your Early Retirement Portfolio: Huge DividendsâEvery MonthâForever.
Disclosure: none