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Goldman says buy dividend stocks amid diving yields

Purchasers work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

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In a falling rate environment, Goldman Sachs is advising shoppers to buy high-dividend payers, which it says are trading at their cheapest levels in nearly 40 years relative to stocks with low pays.

“With the 10-year Treasury yield at just 1.5% and the Fed likely to cut two more times this year, investors should look for openings in dividend stocks,” Goldman chief U.S. equity strategist David Kostin said in a note Friday.

Investors take piled into safe-haven Treasurys recently, pushing bond yields to their historic lows last week as estimates sold off. If the market remains shaky in the face of a slowing global economy and the intensified trade war, investors may look to standards with more steady dividend income, according to Goldman.

The market is pricing in “an overly pessimistic” level of dividend payouts with the swap-market assesses implying merely 0.7% growth over the next decade, Kostin pointed out. Additionally, the valuation gap between high- and low-dividend-yield merchandises is close to the widest it has been in the last 40 years, the strategist said.

However, the reality is that U.S. companies are enlarging dividends steadily with the S&P 500 dividends rising by 9% in the first and second quarters this year, he said. Goldman foreboded the S&P 500 annualized dividend growth to be 3.5% during the next decade.

Goldman screened stocks with concentrated dividend growth and high dividend yields, based on their dividend estimates and payout ratios. The average stockpile in its basket has a dividend yield of 3.8% versus 2.1% for the typical S&P 500 stock.

AT&T, Kohl’s and data storage assemblage Seagate Technology all have a dividend yield of about 6% and make the Goldman list of about 50 hoards. Food processing company Archer-Daniels Midland, Citizens Financials and real estate company Simon Property Bundle are also among those big dividend growers.

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