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3 High-Yield Dividend Stocks to Buy Now and Hold for the Next 20 Years

  • Brookfield Infrastructure, Omega Healthcare Investors, and Realty Income offer dividend yields above 4% at recent prices.

  • Brookfield Infrastructure has produced steadily growing cash flows thanks to investments in pipelines, transportation, and data centers.

  • Omega Healthcare Investors and Realty Income are two real estate investment trusts with successful ongoing strategies.

Does a topsy-turvy stock market and reports of underutilized U.S. shipping ports make you nervous about buying, or even holding stocks? At times like these, it’s a lot easier to ignore the news flow when you have a portfolio full of dividend payers that deposit increasingly larger payments into your brokerage account.

Investors seeking reliable sources of passive income will be glad to know that Brookfield Infrastructure (NYSE: BIPC), Omega Healthcare Investors (NYSE: OHI), and Realty Income (NYSE: O) offer dividend yields above 4% at recent prices. Here’s why adding them to a portfolio now and holding them for the next couple of decades is a great move for many income-seeking investors.

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Individual investor at home with three computers and lots of charts.
Image source: Getty Images.

Brookfield Infrastructure is a leading infrastructure investor that owns utilities, pipelines, data centers, and heaps of transportation assets spread around the globe. It’s a dividend investor’s dream come true because the assets in its portfolio generate predictable cash flows thanks to long-term contracts and government-regulated pricing.

Infrastructure isn’t a high-growth business, but Brookfield Infrastructure has been able to raise its payout by 32.7% since 2020. At recent prices, the stock offers a juicy 4.5% yield, and I won’t be surprised if its dividend growth rate accelerates in the decades ahead.

With heaps of depreciating assets, funds from operations (FFO) is the preferred metric for measuring Brookfield Infrastructure’s ability to raise its dividend-paying commitment. Management recently reported first-quarter FFO that rose 12% year over year due to a combination of rate increases and acquisitions it made last year.

The company made growth capital expenditures that totaled $730 million in the first quarter. Despite the huge outlay, it still has $4.9 billion in liquidity. This is more than enough to continue running its time-tested strategy, which makes steady gains over the next couple of decades seem likely.

Omega Healthcare Investors is a real estate investment trust (REIT) that focuses mostly on skilled nursing and transitional healthcare facilities. With the other 30% of its portfolio made up of senior housing facilities, this stock is a relatively safe way to bet on an extremely reliable trend. From 2020 through 2023, the population aged 65 and older increased in all but one of America’s 387 metro areas, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.