Want $1,000 in Super-Safe Dividend Income in 2024? Invest $9,750 Into the Following 3 Ultra-High-Yield Stocks

Want $1,000 in Super-Safe Dividend Income in 2024? Invest $9,750 Into the Following 3 Ultra-High-Yield Stocks

Explore stocks on Coinbase

For more than a century, Wall Street has been a wealth-building machine. Although there are countless strategies that can, over time, make investors richer, few strategies have been more successful from a return standpoint than buying and holding dividend stocks.

The unmistakable lure of income stocks is that they outperform. According to a report issued last year by the Hartford Funds, in collaboration with Ned Davis Research, dividend-paying companies have generated an annualized return of 9.18% over the past half-century (1973-2022). By comparison, publicly traded companies that don't offer a payout have clawed their way to a more pedestrian annualized return of 3.95% over the same five-decade stretch.

These results shouldn't be a surprise. Companies that regularly dole out a dividend to their shareholders are often profitable on a recurring basis, time-tested, and capable of offering transparent, long-term growth guidance. They're just the type of business we'd expect to increase in value over long periods.

A person holding an assortment of folded cash bills by their fingertips.
Image source: Getty Images.

However, no two dividend stocks are cut from the same cloth. Although high-yield stocks can be appealing, they can sometimes come with added risk. But this doesn't mean all supercharged income stocks are off the table.

If you want $1,000 in super-safe dividend income in 2024, all you'd need to do is invest $9,750 (split equally, three ways) into the following three ultra-high-yield stocks, which sport a scorching-hot average yield of 10.28%!

AT&T: 6.43% yield

The first exceptionally reliable ultra-high-yield dividend stock that can help you generate $1,000 in income in 2024 from an initial investment of $9,750 (split across three stocks) is telecom behemoth AT&T (NYSE: T).

Whereas Wall Street is firmly in a new bull market, AT&T has badly lagged. This is a function of investors being concerned following a July report from The Wall Street Journal that alleged legacy telecom companies utilizing lead-sheathed cables could face large environmental/health liabilities, as well as replacement costs.

For what it's worth, AT&T responded to the WSJ's allegations by noting that it's not seen any evidence that lead-clad cables pose an environmental hazard or threat to people. Furthermore, any potential liabilities would likely be determined by the U.S. court system, which is often slow to issue rulings. In short, this a relative nonstarter for AT&T and its peers.

What current and prospective investors should be focused on is AT&T's steadily improving operating performance. Upgrading its network to support 5G download speeds is encouraging high-margin data consumption. Since wireless services are effectively viewed as a basic necessity, churn rates remain near a historic low.