Dividend Investors Need to Add These Tech Stocks to Their Portfolio | The Motley Fool (2024)

Don't write off technology stocks if you're in the market for income.

Business growth and return of excess cash to shareholders is a powerful investment combination that can add up to incredible returns over time. That's why investors looking for income shouldn't ignore tech stocks. Though not known for the highest dividend yields around, the technology sector produces some incredible names that help investors compound their growth and pay some bills along the way. Three worth a look for your dividend portfolio are Lam Research (LRCX -2.10%), OpenText (OTEX 0.86%), and Broadcom (AVGO -4.31%).

A bet on high-end computing, manufacturing, and a chip shortage

Nicholas Rossolillo (Lam Research): This is no household name in the semiconductor industry, but Lam Research is nevertheless a critical player in the world of electronic hardware. Along with peer Applied Materials (AMAT -2.34%), Lam provides chipmakers with the equipment they need to manufacture the building blocks of the digital world. There are hundreds of steps involved in making an advanced semiconductor, and Lam designs the actual machines that do it -- and provides some service and support (about one-third of its revenue) to customers along the way.

Technologies like 5G mobile networks, AI, vehicle autonomy and safety systems, and data centers that support high-end cloud computing require tremendous computational power. Designing the chips that underpin these developments require intensive research in physics, chemistry, and engineering. Lam is thus an indispensable part of technology manufacturing, and new demands from integrated circuits are setting off a new factory upgrade cycle among chipmakers. As a result, this equipment maker is enjoying record sales right now. Revenue was up 54% in the first quarter of 2021 to $3.85 billion, and free cash flow was up 120% to $1.08 billion.

Lam stock currently trades for 23 times one-year forward expected earnings, reflecting the expectation for a continual rapid rise in the bottom line this year as manufacturers upgrade their processes and a global chip shortage has companies scrambling to ramp up production. Sure, Lam is a cyclical business. Once this chip shortage eventually eases and the current upgrade cycle that's underway is complete, sales will reverse course for a time. However, bear in mind that one-third of Lam's business that's tied to ongoing services and isn't tied to cyclical equipment shipments. This is one resilient business with a long track record of making higher highs and higher lows.

Dividend Investors Need to Add These Tech Stocks to Their Portfolio | The Motley Fool (1)

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Plus, there's just no telling how long the current upcycle will last. Given how important all things electronic have become and with the federal government (and others around the globe) looking to invest in next-gen manufacturing, my gut tells me it could last a while. Lam looks like a long-term value as it rides a wave of technological innovation. And along the way, it pays a decent dividend currently yielding 0.9% a year (which cost the company just $187 million of the $1.08 billion in free cash flow generated last quarter); the remaining free cash flow gets returned to shareholders via stock repurchases. If you haven't done so yet, put this semiconductor industry leader on your watch list.

Dividend Investors Need to Add These Tech Stocks to Their Portfolio | The Motley Fool (2)

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OpenText: Cash-backed payouts and strong revenue growth

Anders Bylund (OpenText): Data management expert OpenText is a growth story with legs. The company has nearly doubled its annual sales over the last five years while boosting free cash flows by 135%. Dividend payments rose 75% over the same period, keeping the effective yield relatively stable at approximately 1.5%.

This may not be a familiar name to many investors, so here's a quick overview of OpenText's business. The company helps other businesses organize, access, and manage their business data through a combination of cloud-based and on-site tools and services. Along the way, OpenText has acquired market-defining names such as enterprise content manager Documentum and backup systems specialist Carbonite.

OpenText's cloud services are growing quickly, generating a generous stream of subscription-based recurring revenue. Profit margins are expected to widen in 2021, and the company generated $1.1 billion of free cash flows over the last four quarters.

This is one of those fast-growing companies with shareholder-friendly cash management policies that really does give you the best of both worlds -- respectable stock returns and solid dividend payouts. OpenText belongs on every serious income investor's watch list.

One of the highest dividend yields in the space is a rock-solid value

Billy Duberstein (Broadcom): Dividends are not easy to come by in the technology world these days; with all of the exciting innovation going on, the highest-quality tech stocks are generally plowing money back into growth. However, Broadcom Ltd. Is one stock you can buy with favorable growth prospects, as well as a hefty 3.15% dividend yield -- twice the rate of the 10-year Treasury note. What's even better? Broadcom has grown that dividend by 642% over just the past six years -- an increase from $1.94 in 2016 to $14.40 projected for 2021!

Broadcom didn't achieve all of that growth organically, but rather via its business model of accretive acquisitions, mostly within the realm of chips vital to communications applications. Think data centers, mobile phones, Wi-Fi switches and routers, factory automation, and auto chips. In recent years, Broadcom even diversified into infrastructure and security software. Those software businesses, which tend to be steadier and more stable than chips sales, now make up just over 25% of revenue.

While the growth-by-acquisition strategy can sometimes be dangerous -- Broadcom's debt and finance leases have almost quadrupled in that time -- the company has been able to generate hefty cash flows from growing chip demand and solid cost and revenue synergies, and the software additions should smooth out future chip cycles. Currently, Broadcom's dividend is a little bit less than 50% of its free cash flow, so it's not in danger by any means.

Of course, we are currently in a semiconductor shortage as the pandemic has accelerated digital adoption across several industries. That means more semiconductor demand and a strong outlook for Broadcom. Last quarter, chip revenue was up 17% and software was up 5%. While investors get nervous every time there is a boom, I'd still anticipate multi-year strength in the sector, coming off the trade war and pandemic.

At just 17.7 times this year's earnings estimates, Broadcom is also much cheaper than many rivals. That makes it a solid value, and a diversified sleep-well-at-night stock you can own for the long haul, all while reaping a hefty and growing payout.

Anders Bylund has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Billy Duberstein owns shares of Applied Materials, Broadcom Ltd, and Lam Research and has the following options: short July 2021 $300.0 puts on Lam Research, short May 2021 $85.0 puts on Applied Materials, short November 2020 $300.0 puts on Lam Research, short October 2020 $210.0 puts on Lam Research, short October 2020 $250.0 puts on Lam Research, and short September 2020 $160.0 puts on Lam Research. His clients may own shares of the companies mentioned. Nicholas Rossolillo owns shares of Applied Materials, Broadcom Ltd, and Lam Research. His clients may own shares of the companies mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Lam Research. The Motley Fool recommends Applied Materials, Broadcom Ltd, and Open Text. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Dividend Investors Need to Add These Tech Stocks to Their Portfolio | The Motley Fool (2024)

FAQs

Should I add dividend stocks to my portfolio? ›

Dividend investing can be a great investment strategy. Dividend stocks have historically outperformed the S&P 500 with less volatility. That's because dividend stocks provide two sources of return: regular income from dividend payments and capital appreciation of the stock price. This total return can add up over time.

What is the best dividend tech stock? ›

As of April 30, 2024, here are the 10 dividend-paying tech stocks with the largest weight in the Morningstar US Target Market Exposure Index:
  • Nvidia NVDA.
  • Alphabet GOOGL/GOOG.
  • Meta Platforms META.
  • Broadcom AVGO.
  • Salesforce CRM.
  • Cisco Systems CSCO.
  • Accenture ACN.
  • Qualcomm QCOM.
May 9, 2024

What are the top 5 dividend stocks to buy? ›

20 high-dividend stocks
CompanyDividend Yield
CVR Energy Inc (CVI)9.21%
Eagle Bancorp Inc (MD) (EGBN)8.87%
Evolution Petroleum Corporation (EPM)8.82%
Civitas Resources Inc (CIVI)8.82%
17 more rows
7 days ago

What are the Motley Fool 10 best stocks? ›

The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Amazon, Chewy, Fiverr International, Fortinet, Nvidia, PayPal, Salesforce, and Uber Technologies. The Motley Fool recommends the following options: short June 2024 $67.50 calls on PayPal.

How many dividend stocks should I have in my portfolio? ›

There is no hard and fast rule for how many dividend stocks to start a portfolio, but a good starting point is to aim for a minimum of 10. This will give you a good mix of different companies and sectors and help to diversify your risk.

Does adding dividend stocks improve portfolio performance? ›

There are a couple of reasons that make dividend-paying stocks particularly useful. First, the income they provide can help investors meet liquidity needs. And second, dividend-focused investing has historically demonstrated the ability to help to lower volatility and buffer losses during market drawdowns.

What is the safest dividend stock to buy now? ›

7 Dividend Stocks to Buy and Hold Forever
StockForward Yield*
JPMorgan Chase & Co. (ticker: JPM)2.4%
Procter & Gamble Co. (PG)2.4%
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)3.3%
Home Depot Inc. (HD)2.6%
3 more rows

What is the best dividend company of all time? ›

Some of the best dividend stocks include Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ), The Procter & Gamble Company (NYSE:PG), and AbbVie Inc (NYSE:ABBV) with impressive track records of dividend growth and strong balance sheets.

What stock pays the highest dividend yield? ›

Key Takeaways
Top 10 Dividend Stocks By Forward Dividend Yield
GECCGreat Elm Capital Corp.95.94
IIFMorgan Stanley India Investment Fund242.67
XFLTXAI Octagon Floating Rate & Alternative Income Trust369.15
ABRArbor Realty Trust2,454
7 more rows

What are the three dividend stocks to buy and hold forever? ›

Here are three high-yield dividend stocks I'm buying hand over fist.
  • Enterprise Products Partners LP. Enterprise Products Partners LP (EPD 0.32%) is a leading U.S. midstream energy company. ...
  • Pfizer. Pfizer (PFE -0.38%) ranks as one of the world's biggest biopharmaceutical companies. ...
  • Verizon Communications.
2 days ago

What stock currently pays the highest monthly dividend? ›

Top 10 Highest-Yielding Monthly Dividend Stocks in 2022
  • What dividends and REITs are.
  • ARMOUR Residential REIT – 20.7%
  • Orchid Island Capital – 17.8%
  • AGNC Investment – 14.8%
  • Oxford Square Capital – 13.7%
  • Ellington Residential Mortgage REIT – 13.2%
  • SLR Investment – 11.5%
  • PennantPark Floating Rate Capital – 10%

What are the best dividend stocks to buy in 2024? ›

10 Best Dividend Growth Stocks of May 2024
Stock (ticker)3-Year Avg. Ann. Dividend Growth
Target Corporation (TGT)17.4%
Domino's Pizza Inc. (DPZ)17.1%
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. (MMC)15.2%
Automatic Data Processing, Inc (ADP)14.6%
6 more rows
May 2, 2024

What stocks will skyrocket in 2024? ›

*Based on current CFRA 12-month target prices.
  • Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) ...
  • Alphabet Inc. (GOOG, GOOGL) ...
  • Meta Platforms Inc. (META) ...
  • JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) ...
  • Tesla Inc. (TSLA) ...
  • Mastercard Inc. (MA) ...
  • Salesforce Inc. (CRM) ...
  • Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD)
Apr 26, 2024

What is Warren Buffett buying? ›

The stock on Buffett's buy list in each of the last three quarters has been commercial property and casualty insurance company Chubb (NYSE: CB). Buffett acquired nearly 26 million shares of the company over the past three quarters, a stake that's now worth about $6.9 billion.

What stocks are in Motley Fool's ownership portfolio? ›

Portfolio Holdings for Motley Fool Asset Management
Company (Ticker)Portfolio WeightValued At
Watsco Ordinary Shares (WSO)4.6$138M
Berkshire Hathaway Inc Cl B Ordinary Shares (BRK.B)3.6$108M
Microsoft Corp Ordinary Shares (MSFT)3.2$95M
Amazon Ordinary Shares (AMZN)3.1$91M
65 more rows

Is it better to hold dividend stocks? ›

No matter what stage of life you're in, dividend-paying stocks can be a great way to supplement your income and improve your portfolio's growth potential. Just be sure you research the companies' overall financial health, not just their dividend rates, before investing.

Is there a downside to dividend stocks? ›

Dividend-paying stocks have the potential for income through dividends and capital appreciation, but they come with higher volatility and market risk. The choice between the two depends on your risk tolerance, investment goals, and time horizon.

Should I put dividend stocks in my taxable account? ›

Stocks and Funds That Pay Dividends

Dividends are not a bad thing, but they are considered taxable income in the year you receive them. If you're invested in stocks or funds that generate a lot of dividend income, your current-year tax bills may be high.

Can you live off a dividend portfolio? ›

Depending on how much money you have in those stocks or funds, their growth over time, and how much you reinvest your dividends, you could be generating enough money to live off of each year, without having any other retirement plan.

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