Time to Pounce: 3 Dividend Stocks That Are Too Cheap to Ignore

During a soaring stock market, it can be easy to ignore the benefits of companies that pay dividends. But when equities are selling off, a dividend can provide a worthwhile incentive to hold a stock through periods of volatility. Dividends also generate income without the need to sell or reduce a position, which is a great way to supplement income or generate extra money that can be reinvested in the market.

Companies that pay dividends and trade at reasonable multiples relative to their earnings provide the income and value that's right up the alley of a risk-averse investor. Here's why Essential Utilities (NYSE: WTRG), Equinor (NYSE: EQNR), and Vitesse Energy (NYSE: VTS) are three dividend stocks worth buying now.

time to pounce: 3 dividend stocks that are too cheap to ignore

Smiling person washing their hands.

Quench your thirst for cheap dividends with this water stock

Scott Levine (Essential Utilities): Successful investors know the importance of striking when the iron is hot. Now seems like one of those times for Essential Utilities. It's one of the largest water utilities based on market capitalization. Essential Utilities stock, which currently offers a 3.3% forward dividend yield, is hanging on the discount rack.

Although high-yield dividend stocks are alluring, it's important to test the waters before jumping in with an investment, to confirm that the company is in good financial health and able to sustain large distributions. That is certainly the case with Essential Utilities.

The company's bread and butter is its regulated markets business -- this represented 98% and 97% of operating revenue in 2023 and 2022, respectively. This helps give management excellent insight into the company's future cash flows. As a result, management can plan for capital expenditures , such as dividends to reward shareholders and acquisitions to help sustain the company's growth.

As of the first quarter, Essential Utilities reported that it has six pending acquisitions valued at about $385 million, representing more than 215,000 customers. For context, Essential Utilities had about 1.9 million customers at the end of 2023.

Those motivated to dip their toes into this leading water utility should be pleased with its current valuation. Shares of Essential Utilities are trading at a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 17.6, a notabldiscount to their five-year average of 29.8 and the S&P 500's P/E of 28.2.

An oil giant that is ramping up renewable energy investments

Daniel Foelber (Equinor): In the recent quarter, Norwegian energy giant Equinor did pretty much exactly what it told investors it would do. It continued to grow oil and gas production at a modest pace of 3% internationally, made new discoveries offshore in Norway, invested in renewable energy (mainly offshore wind and solar), and returned a boatload of money to shareholders through dividends and buybacks.

Equinor completed the first tranche of its 2024 share buyback program in April and reaffirmed intentions for total capital distribution of $14 billion in 2024 -- including buybacks and dividends. It plans to spend up to $6 billion on buybacks this year, and $10 billion to $12 billion between 2024 and 2025. It paid an ordinary dividend of $0.35 per share and an extraordinary dividend of $0.35 per share and plans to raise the cash dividend by 2% per year.

Combining dividends and buybacks, Equinor estimates it is giving investors a yield of 17% this year. Needless to say, Equinor's capital return program is substantially larger than its peers' -- making the company a great choice for income investors.

Equinor has been one of the few integrated majors to not double down on fossil fuels. Instead, it's continued investing in renewable energy projects and charting a path toward reducing oil and gas production over time. Part of the pressure comes from Norway's energy policy, with 75% of Equinor owned by the Norwegian state and Norwegian private owners.

Equinor's renewable energy generation has been growing rapidly, up 48% from the same quarter last year. But so far, renewable energy projects have not been a good use of capital relative to oil and gas. Equinor is trying to de-risk its 500 MW Empire Wind 1 project offshore New York by bringing in a new partner that will reduce its capital expenditures. It was awarded a new offtake contract and project financing and now expects to produce a nominal equity return between 12% and 16% from its U.S. East Coast offshore wind portfolio, which is decent but not great.

Overall, Equinor's renewable energy projects have yet to pay off. And to avoid taking one step forward and two steps back with its fossil fuel investments, it is deciding to buy back a ton of stock and pay a generous dividend. Equinor is a good choice for investors who believe in the energy transition and agree with its use of capital. The stock is dirt cheap, trading at a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 8.1 -- significantly below U.S. giants ExxonMobil and Chevron, which both sport forward P/E ratios above 12.

With a forward dividend yield of around 10% -- including both its ordinary payout and its expected extraordinary dividend -- Equinor is an excellent source of passive income worth considering now.

Vitesse Energy's dividend is a priority

Lee Samaha (Vitesse Energy): With the market continuing to accord low valuations to the energy companies, it's hardly surprising that the sector is embroiled in a deal-making frenzy. As such, some oil and gas exploration and production companies with high dividends, such as Devon Energy and Diamondback Energy, are focusing more on acquisitions and share buybacks than on dividends this year.

In common with Devon and Diamondback, Vitesse is also gushing out cash and trades on an excellent free cash flow (FCF) yield. However, Vitesse's acquisition activity (investing in development assets in its core North Dakota region) is much more piecemeal and in line with its usual strategy.

Vitesse is not an owner/operator of assets. Instead, it invests in minority interests in wells operated by well-established partners. As of May, Vitesse has interests in 6,932 wells with a working interest averaging 2.7% per well.

Unlike Devon and Diamondback (which pay a fixed and variable dividend), Vitesse simply pays a fixed dividend. It's currently $0.525 a quarter or $2.10 a year, yielding 8.2% at the current price. As such, Vitesse offers an excellent option for investors who are bullish on energy prices (ultimately, the earnings and cash flow of all three are oil-price-led) and who prefer dividends upfront.

Should you invest $1,000 in Essential Utilities right now?

Before you buy stock in Essential Utilities, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Essential Utilities wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $808,105!*

Stock Advisor provides investors with an easy-to-follow blueprint for success, including guidance on building a portfolio, regular updates from analysts, and two new stock picks each month. The Stock Advisor service has more than quadrupled the return of S&P 500 since 2002*.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of June 10, 2024

Daniel Foelber has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Lee Samaha has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Scott Levine has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Chevron and Vitesse Energy. The Motley Fool recommends Equinor Asa. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

OTHER NEWS

3 hrs ago

Heatwaves do discriminate: This new map shows who is most at risk when hot weather strikes Europe

3 hrs ago

US ambitions to 'rule the world' doomed to failure, Lavrov tells forum

3 hrs ago

Euro 2024: Julian Nagelsmann as Germany's X factor

3 hrs ago

Lufthansa is adding up to €72 to ticket prices to pay for sustainable fuel

3 hrs ago

Head coach, football player among 3 charged in connection with Hong Kong match-fixing case

3 hrs ago

What Happens Next after Ruto Withdraws Finance Bill 2024: Will Bill Become Law Automatically?

3 hrs ago

Blackstone snaps up UK hotel operator Village Hotels

3 hrs ago

Medtronic's longtime CFO Karen Parkhill to leave, join HP

3 hrs ago

Novo Nordisk makes impairment loss of $816 million in Q2

3 hrs ago

Yen tumbles to 38-year low vs dollar as likely Japan intervention looms

3 hrs ago

UK retail sales go into reverse this month, CBI survey shows

4 hrs ago

Rivian jumps as $5 billion Volkswagen investment signals 'vote of confidence'

4 hrs ago

Did the West cause the war in Ukraine?

4 hrs ago

Wealthy nation creditor club sees tide shifting as debt defaults peter out

4 hrs ago

Wall Street slips as tech recovery stalls

4 hrs ago

Yen slumps to lowest since 1986, putting traders on red alert

4 hrs ago

What If We Had Nuclear-Powered Rockets?

4 hrs ago

Why Scotland Are Out Of Euro 2024

4 hrs ago

Sri Lanka seals debt deal with China, others after crash

4 hrs ago

Is World Superbike's superstar Razgatlioglu a genuine solution for a MotoGP team?

4 hrs ago

3 Blue Chip Dividend Stocks to Buy and Hold Forever

4 hrs ago

Forget Just 1 AI Stock: This Trio Could Power Your Portfolio's Future

4 hrs ago

Minimum Wage: Governors hold emergency meeting

4 hrs ago

Japan authorities on high alert against rapid yen decline, says top currency diplomat

4 hrs ago

Euro 2024: Rio Ferdinand names three players who can help England win trophy

4 hrs ago

The best traditional restaurants on the Amalfi Coast

4 hrs ago

Transfer: Nottingham Forest ready to sell Emmanuel Dennis

5 hrs ago

Transfer: Trabzonspor want Onuachu on loan for another season

5 hrs ago

Amazon cloud giant AWS wants public sector to embrace AI

5 hrs ago

Students at 2 Hong Kong schools not singing China’s national anthem loudly enough, inspections find

5 hrs ago

Russian court orders Italy's UniCredit to pay $480 million over aborted gas project

5 hrs ago

3 Things You Need to Know If You Buy the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF Today

5 hrs ago

Want $1,000 in Dividend Income? Here's How Much You Have to Invest in Coca-Cola Stock

5 hrs ago

One Day, Nvidia Stock Will Go Down. Here's How to Keep It From Hurting Your Portfolio.

5 hrs ago

Anthony Joshua to fight Dubois for world title as Usyk vacates IBF belt

5 hrs ago

Euro 2024: Carragher blames England star for poor performance

5 hrs ago

Investing $100,000 in SCHD, VIG, or VYM: Which Is the Better ETF

5 hrs ago

2 Reasons Why Eli Lilly's Stock Likely Hasn't Peaked

5 hrs ago

India: Farmer discovers 6.65 carat diamond, fortune shines bright

5 hrs ago

Legal & General unit to sell Glencore stake over thermal coal plans