Some of the best opportunities on the market are trading at unsustainable 52-week lows.
They’re even more attractive if they pay out regular dividends.
Not only can you benefit from their higher yields, but you have an opportunity to cash in on the stock’s recovery. Here are just a few you may want to consider.
UnitedHealth Group (SYM: UNH)
With a yield of 2.1%, beaten-down shares of UnitedHealth Group are also attractive.
Granted, the stock fell apart after missing earnings and cutting guidance.
In fact, its EPS of $7.20 missed by nine cents. Revenue of $109.58 billion, up 9.8% year over year, missed by $2.02 billion. The company also revised its 2025 adjusted earnings outlook to $26.00 to $26.50, down from $29.50 to $30.00 per share. All of which led several firms to cut their price targets or downgrade the stock.
However, it also appears the UNH stock has priced in the negativity. Now trading at $399, we’d like to see the stock initially retest $480. Fear has become an opportunity for UNH.
Target (SYM: TGT)
With a yield of 4.6%, Target hasn’t been this cheap since early 2020.
However, with a good deal of negativity now priced into the stock, you may want to buy the Target stock for its dividend and for the opportunity to cash in on its recovery. We expect for it to rally significantly higher
We also have to consider that Target’s dividend is safe, with a free cash flow payout ratio of just over 50%. Plus, Target is trading at just 10.6x forward earnings and at less than half of sales.
Stanley Black & Decker (SYM: SWK)
With a yield of 5.34%, Stanley Black & Decker trades at lows last seen in 2013. All thanks to lower first quarter sales and tariff concerns. However, much like Target and UnitedHealth, it also appears to have priced in a good deal of negativity.
Helping, it also declared a quarterly dividend of 82 cents, which is payable on June 17 to shareholders of record as of June 3. Plus, analysts at Baird just raised their price target on SWK to $65 from $60 per share.
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