Seeking up to 8.5% Dividend Yield? Well Fargo Suggests 2 Dividend Stocks to Buy

Seeking up to 8.5% Dividend Yield? Well Fargo Suggests 2 Dividend Stocks to Buy

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More than two months in to 2024, and markets are posting solid gains year-to-date, with the S&P 500 up by 7%, and the NASDAQ up just over 8.5%. These are good returns, but returns can always run higher – and one way to ensure that is to buy into high-yield dividend stocks. The best dividend payers offer a combination of reliability and high yield, that give investors a steady income well above the prevailing rates of inflation.

Div payers come in lots of flavors, and some offer more attractive sets of attributes than others. One less-common place to look for solid dividends is in skilled nursing facilities (SNFs). These medical facilities are designed for long-term care with patients who require close monitoring; think nursing homes and long-term rehabilitation hospitals.

And the link to dividends? A number of real estate investment trusts (REITs) focus their business activities on SNFs. These companies are benefiting from the aging demographics in the US. As the Baby Boomers and Gen Xers grow older, the over-65 population will increase from ~16% now to 22% or higher by 2050.

Wells Fargo analyst Connor Siversky is following this line of thought, seeing SNF-focused REITs as a solid play. He writes, “We are more positive on REIT SNF portfolios as operating metrics continue to improve. In our view, higher rent coverage should justify multiple valuations that are closer to, albeit still behind Pre-COVID levels.”

Getting into specifics, Siversky is suggesting 2 dividend stocks to buy, that offer investors up to 8% yields. With help from the TipRanks databanks, let’s take a closer look at them, to see just where they’re likely to go from here.

Omega Healthcare Investors (OHI)

The first stock we’ll look at is Omega Healthcare. This REIT got its start in 1992, and since then has built a remunerative portfolio based on SNFs, as well as assisted living facilities (ALFs) and memory care and behavioral care facilities. Omega operates as the owner of its portfolio properties, with the facility operations and management handled by the outside firms that hold the leases. The outside parties receive careful vetting, and Omega leases its properties mainly on the long-term triple-net lease model. In addition, Omega will provide financing on some of its properties, for fixed-rate mortgage loans.

Omega has prioritized stability in its portfolio. The company sets its typical lease agreement for 10 years, and makes extensions available to the leaseholders. This is conducive to creating a steady income stream from the portfolio. And – Omega’s portfolio is extensive. The company works in 42 US states and the UK, and bases its business on 862 properties. These properties boast a total of 84,125 beds, and are operated by 69 leaseholder firms.