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Top Dividend Stocks 2012

February 25, 2012 by · Comments Off on Top Dividend Stocks 2012 

Top Dividend Stocks 2012, In June, I invested my money equally in a selection of 10 high-yield dividend stocks. Those names offer triple the yield of the average S&P 500 stock. You can read all the details here. Now let’s check out the results so far.

Company
Cost Basis
Shares
Yield
Total Value
Return

Southern $39.71 25.0818 4.3% $1,109.62 11.4%
Exelon $41.82 23.818 5.4% $929.38 (6.7%)
National Grid $48.90 20.3693 5.8% $1,036.59 4.1%
Philip Morris International $68.49 14.5429 3.7% $1,194.99 20.0%
Annaly Capital $18.24 65.5 13.8% $1,089.27 (7.2%)
Frontier Communications $7.88 126.4243 8.7% $577.76 (42.0%)
Plum Creek Timber $38.42 26 4.4% $1,011.92 1.3%
Brookfield Infrastructure Partners $26.12 38.2825 4.7% $1,147.33 14.7%
Vodafone $26.52 37.5566 4.9% $1,028.30 3.2%
Seaspan $14.61 69 4.7% $1,170.93 16.2%
Cash $214.28
Dividends Receivable $35.28
Total Portfolio $10,545.63 3.8%
Investment in SPY

(including dividends)
7.4%
Relative Performance

(percentage points)
(3.6)

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor’s.

Our total portfolio performance improved overall from the previous week, moving from 2.7% to 3.8% this week. We ended up gaining 1.1% on the S&P even as it moved ahead, but this still left our portfolio underperforming by 3.6%. We have four stocks outperforming the index.

I’m still confident in the long-run nature of this portfolio, and I fully expect it to outperform. Lately we’re seeing a lot of overconfidence and bullish sentiment in the market. If we see a downward move in the S&P, I think we’ll again quickly gain the upper hand. Stocks have been rallying furiously for months, and I don’t think that type of performance can go on for much longer. We may be seeing some early signs of this shift, with our portfolio clearly doing better than the S&P over the past week.

In its latest earnings report, we got some dubious news from Annaly Capital (NYS: NLY) , one of the most popular dividend stocks due to its massive payout. In this video article, “Bad News for the Market’s Hottest Dividends,” I explain why investors should be cautious on the mortgage REITs going forward. Frontier’s (NYS: FTR) abysmal performance continues to hurt the portfolio, and now we don’t even have the consolation of a $0.75 annual dividend to salve our wounds, since the company recently cut its quarterly payouts to just $0.10.

With over $200 in the account, I’ll be deploying the cash shortly, subject to the Fool’s trading restrictions.

Dividends and other announcements
We’re just about through earnings seasons, and there are a bunch of companies going ex-dividend in the next couple weeks:

Philip Morris (NYS: PM) re-affirmed its 2012 adjusted earnings guidance at $5.25 – $5.35 per share, straddling the consensus view of $5.29. The midpoint of guidance would give the company a P/E of 15.5 — not exactly cheap, but definitely not too much to pay for a steady performer like Philip Morris.
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission recently proposed three rules to improve safety at the nation’s nuclear energy facilities. The proposed rules require plant operators to establish plans to deal with a catastrophe scenario, improve instrumentation in pools storing spent fuel, and respond to containment structure issues similar to those at the failed Japanese nuclear plant. If the rules are enacted, they would add millions in dollars of costs to nuclear plant operators such as Exelon (NYS: EXC) and Southern (NYS: SO) .
Dividend news:

Southern went ex-dividend on Feb. 2 and pays out a dividend of $0.4725 per share on Mar. 5.
Seaspan went ex-dividend on Feb. 9 and paid out a dividend of $0.1875 per share on Feb. 21.
Exelon went ex-dividend on Feb. 13 and pays out $0.525 per share on Mar. 8.
Plum Creek went ex-dividend on Feb. 15 and pays out $0.42 per share on Mar. 2.
All that, of course, means more money coming into our pockets.

It’s fun to sit back and get paid, and with the market volatility, we might have a good chance to reinvest those dividends at good prices. Europe continues to be an absolute mess, and continued bad news will likely have stocks plunging again — and if they do, I’ll be inclined to pick more shares up.

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