I like to buy companies with long histories of dividend increases while they are offering historically high dividend yields. On the surface, that would suggest that I might want to buy Altria (NYSE: MO) and its huge 8.7% yield. No, thanks: I'd rather own Hormel Foods (NYSE: HRL) and its much lower 3.1% ...
motleyfoolusx:hrlusx:mo
To be fair, it doesn't take a lot to offer a higher yield than the 1.3% investors are collecting today from the S&P 500 index. And yet investors looking for down-and-out stocks with high yields will still like what Realty Income (NYSE: O), Franklin Resources (NYSE: BEN), and Hormel Foods (NYSE: HRL) ...
motleyfoolusx:ousx:hrlusx:ben
I am a dividend investor trying to build a portfolio of stocks that will help to provide me with income in retirement. When I see an attractively priced stock that has a solid business and an attractive dividend history, I go in for a deep dive. That's what got me to buy Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG) when ...
motleyfoolusx:hrlusx:pg
If you are the type of investor who likes to buy certain stocks when everyone else is selling them, then you will probably find Beyond Meat (NASDAQ: BYND) and Hormel Foods (NYSE: HRL) interesting. The problem with investing when there is so-called "blood in the streets," however, is making sure that ...
motleyfoolusx:byndusx:hrl
If you are trying to create generational wealth through your investments, you should probably try to find boring and reliable companies. Look for businesses that have proven they can keep chugging along through good times and bad, since life always gives you both. On that score, Procter & Gamble (NYSE: ...
motleyfoolusx:kousx:hrlusx:pg
Food products company Hormel Foods (NYSE: HRL) could be considered a blue chip stock. Most companies that raise their dividends every year for more than five consecutive decades earn that label. But Hormel's stock price doesn't reflect that now -- it's down nearly 40% from the all-time high it reached ...
motleyfoolusx:hrl
Wall Street loves a good story, on both the positive and negative sides. Right now, unfortunately, the story for Hormel Foods (NYSE: HRL) is a bad one. Which is why the stock has fallen roughly 35% from its 2022 high-water mark. While the food maker is facing very real headwinds, it is highly likely ...
motleyfoolusx:hrl