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3 Stocks To Buy Before 2019 (Dividends Up To 6.5%)

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This article is more than 5 years old.

Now that the election’s over, it’s time for us contrarians to get greedy!

And I’ve got just the thing: 3 hated buys we can use to rack up serious gains and dividends while the rest of the herd struggles to get its bearings.

Where do these 3 cash machines come from? The defense and infrastructure sectors.

Now you might see where I’m coming from on infrastructure. Probably the one thing Republicans and Democrats agree on is that our ramshackle roads, bridges and power plants need a lot of work.

More on this, including a rock-solid play for 6.5% dividends and “steady as she goes” upside, at the end of this article.

Before we get to that, though, let’s talk defense, a sector that might surprise you given that the media regularly rolls out stories about Democrats’ reluctance to goose the Pentagon budget.

Funny thing is, defense stocks crushed it during the Obama years, including from November 2008 to November 2010, when Democrats were elected to majorities in the House of Representatives and Senate, as well.

And share prices continued to climb when Trump was elected in 2016.

You might be fooled into thinking defense stocks are too pricey now. And sure, some have gotten ahead of themselves. But the two I want to show you below are still bargains, giving us a rare second chance to jump in.

The Generals Always Get What They Want

If you’ve been watching the news (and who hasn’t?), you may have seen President Trump call for a 5% spending cut across all departments. But even if defense gets lumped into that, as Barron’s recently pointed out, only 21% of the department’s budget goes to buying weapons, so procurement could be spared.

In fact, I’ll go you one better: it will be spared. Because other countries (I’m looking at you, China) are always experimenting with new tech, like hypersonic weapons, and America will always have to respond.

2 Unloved Innovators

All of this is good news for Northrop Grumman and Raytheon.

This pair aren’t your typical arms merchants, churning out old-school tanks, trucks and planes for Uncle Sam and his friends.

They’re basically tech stocks—but they’re actually cheaper than big tech names like, say, Alphabet, with each trading just below 16-times forward earnings.

Why do I say they’re tech stocks? Take Northrop. Sure, it churns out military gear like the heavyweight A-10 Thunderbolt plane and the next-gen B-21 bomber. But it also stakes a big part of its business on things like drones for military and research purposes, space-launch systems and cybersecurity.

You may be wondering why I’m excited about 2 stocks with puny current yields around 1.7%. But as I’ve written before, if you’re investing for the long haul, it’s dividend growth that matters—as a surging payout is a critical share-price driver.

And these 2 sport dividend histories that would make your typical holder of, say, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF green with envy!

Thanks to this massive growth, if you’d bought Northrop 10 years ago, you’d be yielding a fat 12% on your initial buy today. Raytheon? A tidy 7.3%.

We can expect plenty more, even if defense spending flattens out for a bit. Northrop pays out just 39% of free cash flow (FCF) and 29% of earnings as dividends, with both well below my “safe zone” of around 50%. Raytheon’s payout growth is also locked in, at 53% of FCF and 39% of earnings.

Both firms also soundly beat expectations in the third quarter. Your next move? Grab these two “undercover” tech stocks now, before their prices race away.

Now Back to Infrastructure

When it comes to infrastructure, the one thing we don’t want to do is stake our nest egg on the popular names, because these stocks are some of the wildest you’ll find.

Take Caterpillar, which may indeed benefit if Trump and the Democrats, er, hammer out an infrastructure plan. Trouble is, CAT boasts a 5-year “beta” of 1.6, meaning it’s 60% more volatile than the market!

Keep in mind that a stock with a beta of 1 largely moves in time with the market. Anything above is more volatile, below, less. (NOC and RTN, for their part, sport betas of 0.83 and 0.84, respectively).

Just look at the wild ride CAT has taken its seasick investors on in the last year!

CAT buyers are taking on a lot of price heartburn for a measly 2.5% dividend!

Which brings me to the Reaves Utility Income Fund, a more conservative, less volatile (beta: 0.45) and diversified way to invest in infrastructure.

The CEF focuses on traditional utilities and telecoms, with almost all of its portfolio in the US, though you do get some exposure to top-notch international companies, as well, such as dominant Canadian telco BCE Inc.

Each of these holdings is a cash cow that will keep dishing money to investors regardless of Washington politics. UTG pays a gaudy 6.5% today, pays dividends monthly and recently boosted its payout, too!

What’s more, UTG trades at a modest 4.3% discount to NAV (it traded at a premium as recently as August 2017). And its smooth ride up puts popular kid CAT to shame.

The time make a move is now, while you can still get UTG for 96 cents on the dollar.

Disclosure: none