5 Monthly Dividend Stocks to Buy

Dividend Stocks

Editor’s note: “6 Monthly Dividend Stocks to Buy” was previously published in April 2020. It has since been updated to include the most relevant information available.

Most dividend stocks pay their shareholders quarterly, but a few dividend-yielding stocks offer monthly distributions.

The group is small: less than 100, with many of the offerings being exchange-traded funds (ETFs) or closed-end actively managed funds. And so investors looking for monthly dividend stocks to buy are limiting their universe quite a bit.

But there are quite a few attractive dividend-yielding stocks that payout monthly. Several offer compelling cases for both their upside and safe dividends, with attributes that go beyond simply the timing of their distributions.

These six stocks all fit that bill, offering not only monthly dividends but potential share price appreciation and reasonable payout ratios.

Monthly Dividend Stocks to Buy: Realty Income (O)

6 Monthly Dividend Stocks to Buy

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Realty Income (NYSE:O) is the best-known of the monthly dividend payers, to the point that it has trademarked the slogan “The Monthly Dividend Company.”

In terms of past performance, the monthly payouts have been just the cherry on top of a delicious sundae. O stock has returned — including dividends — an average of 15.8% annually since 1994, according to an investor presentation. It has been one of the best-performing real estate investment trusts in the market over that stretch.

Even after the beating it took earlier this year at the hands of the novel coronavirus, Realty Income has slowly been making its way back.

The portfolio looks both safe and nicely diversified, with Walgreens Boots Alliance (NASDAQ:WBA) and FedEx (NYSE:FDX) being its two largest tenants. It also has a dividend yield of 4.6%. Considering Realty Income’s track record, it’s worth staying long.

LTC Properties (LTC)

6 Monthly Dividend Stocks to Buy

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Like with O stock, there’s still a solid bull case for senior housing and healthcare property REIT LTC Properties (NYSE:LTC).

With the “baby boom” generation aging, demand should stay strong. Meanwhile, LTC still yields over 6%.

There are some risks now: investors are concerned that changing healthcare insurance reimbursement policies will impact LTC’s tenants. The stock actually hit a five-year low earlier this year as a result. But sentiment has improved — and should continue to do so.

With LTC still trading at a reasonable 18 P/E, the shares could rally. Add to that its yield, paid monthly, and it’s definitely worth a look.

Shaw Communications (SJR)

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Canadian telecommunications company Shaw Communications (NYSE:SJR) hasn’t posted particularly strong performances over the past few years, but SJR actually had added about 12% before March. Now it looks as if it might reclaim those numbers before too long.

There are some concerns about the wireless industry in Canada, much as there are in the U.S.

But with a 4.76% dividend yield and a 18.9 price-earnings multiple, SJR isn’t pricing in much improvement. With 5G a potential catalyst in the mid-term, there’s a nice case for SJR stock at current levels.

Dividends are announced in Canadian dollars, which can affect the payouts received by American investors. Still, a monthly dividend, a nearly 5% yield and potential upside provide a nice combination here.

Apple Hospitality REIT (APLE)

6 Monthly  Stocks to Buy

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Apple Hospitality REIT (NYSE:APLE) owns 241 hotels in the U.S. — 115 of the hotels operate under the Marriott (NASDAQ:MAR) banner, with the remaining 126 flying under the Hilton (NYSE:HLT) flag.

Those two strong brands underpin a strong portfolio. Geographic diversification limits downside risk as well. With an impressive 12.23% yield paid monthly, that makes APLE one of the best dividend-yielding stocks in terms of monthly income.

The story admittedly isn’t perfect. Growth has been relatively meager, and APLE’s dividend has stayed at 10 cents per share per month since a 2015 IPO. There’s no need to add that travel stocks have their work cut out for them for the next few months at the very least.

Investors would have been much better off buying either MAR or HLT, both of which have performed much better.

But for income-focused investors, APLE looks like a strong pick.

Pembina Pipeline (PBA)

6 Monthly Dividend

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Pembina Pipeline (NYSE:PBA) is the biggest company on this list and the riskiest. Pipeline companies generally are lower-risk plays in the oil and gas space, but Pembina does have some concerns.

As with the rest of the energy sector, Canadian oil stocks have struggled of late, and Pembina levered up to acquire Veresen last year. When the bottom fell out in March, PBA stock took a beating. Even after recovering a bit it’s worth a little less than half its February highs.

That said, there’s still a lot to like here. Earnings increased in the double-digits last year, largely due to the acquisition. PBA pays a solid 7.97% dividend. Valuation is relatively reasonable against U.S. rivals like Kinder Morgan (NYSE:KMI) and Plains All American Pipeline (NYSE:PAA).

If Pembina can continue to grow once the Veresen acquisition is fully integrated, there should be a nice upside on top of the nearly 8% yield.

STAG Industrial (STAG)

6 Monthly Dividend Stocks to Buy

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STAG Industrial (NYSE:STAG) isn’t necessarily a spectacular stock, but it’s one that can drive steady long-term returns along with monthly payouts.

The company leases industrial buildings to single tenants and has a nicely diversified portfolio from both a customer and a geographic standpoint. The average lease length currently is nearly five years, which should keep recent dividend growth intact.

Longer-term, there are minor concerns. Valuation isn’t cheap, with a forward P/E of 55. An economic downturn could lead to lease cancellations or even customer bankruptcies. Investors focused on value might want to wait jump in while it’s still below its $34 highs.

But investors looking for growing monthly dividend payouts don’t have a ton of options, and STAG very well might be the best one.

As of this writing, Vince Martin did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities.

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