Traditionally, companies with high-dividend yields were those with low-growth potential, like utilities. Like Freddie, many of the current high-yield companies were created by a falling stock price. And like Freddie, they could always cut the dividend to keep the yield from getting out of whack. But, if they think the stock will rebound, maybe they won't cut it for fear the dividend cut would be yet another thing to drive off investors.
The highest yielding big company I found was Biovail (NYSE: BVF), Canada's biggest drug maker. The company was hit with an SEC complaint that key executives were lying about earnings. The company and the founder just settled a fight over the future direction of the company -- with the founder stepping aside. The stock, at about $10, has been cut in half in the last year. In May the company declared a quarterly dividend of 37.5 cents a share, which gives it a 15% yield at the current price.
Deutche Telekom AG (NYSE: DT), the German phone company that owns T-Mobile, has a dividend yield of 7%. The stock is down from about $23 to about $17 so far this year. Their profit was down this quarter -- largely because of the fall of the dollar to the euro.
Israeli telecom company Partner Communications (NASDAQ: PTNR) just had a great quarter and many believe they will have strong growth over the next five years. This stock trades at about $22, down from about $24 earlier this year. They just paid a quarterly dividend of 38 cents. That gives them a dividend yield of about 7%, which is pretty nice for a growth company.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
8-07-2008 @ 4:59PM
Athelstan said...
Rather than settling for 6 to 12 percent on junk bonds, why not buy some very good beaten down financial stocks and Reits now? Hang on and make a profit in time that will make any junk bond yield look like peanuts.
I can't see buying junk when stocks are so attractive right now. What do the these "top money managers" on Wall Street know we don't know that leads them to recommend junk bonds now?
Aren't they the same people who got us into buying subprime mortgages, Fannie and Freddie shares, and business development stocks specializing in real estate a few years ago?