10 Blue-Chip Bargains To Boost Your Retirement Portfolio Yield (2024)

10 Blue-Chip Bargains To Boost Your Retirement Portfolio Yield (1)

Whenever a red-hot stock, sector, or investing strategy is working well, it's very easy to lose sight of the time-tested principles of disciplined investing.

  1. What are your financial goals?
  2. What is the lowest risk/highest probability strategy for achieving those goals?
  3. What asset allocation (mix of stocks, bonds, and other assets) is most likely to achieve those goals?
  4. What mix of ETFs or mutual funds (if any) are best for achieving your goals?
  5. What mix of individual stocks (if any) is best for achieving your goals?
  6. What yield is best for your goals?
  7. What growth is best for your goals?
  8. Are you buying quality assets at a fair price or better?
  9. Are you sufficiently diversified to achieve your goals in an uncertain future?

These are the actual questions that will determine whether almost all of us retire in comfort, dignity, splendor, or not at all.

But since the S&P is now up 16 of the last 18 weeks, something that hasn't happened since 1971, and NVIDIA has become the "magnificent one," the first question many investors have is "what is the next great stock I should buy."

It's easy to become giddy, and even greedy, and experience FOMO, the "fear of missing out" when stocks are rising at annualized rate of 50% and NVDA is smashing records.

10 Blue-Chip Bargains To Boost Your Retirement Portfolio Yield (3)

NVDA has added $1 trillion in market cap in two months, more than the value of Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) (BRK.B).

But this article is for those worried about bubbles and want to put their savings to work safely and responsibly.

Those who are striving for a comfortable or even rich retirement.

Remember that the best plan in the world will fail if you can't stick with it during bumpy times.

Why Stock Picking Is Hard

The downside of a 100% stock portfolio is that even if diversified, you're making a relatively concentrated bet on a handful of companies.

Stock picking is hard, at least in the long term, and here's why.

Almost half of all US stocks from 1980 to 2021 suffered 70%-plus crashes and never recovered. Their fundamentals broke and stayed broken.

Even more shocking, a study by Hendrik Bessembinder of Arizona State University shows the best stocks of the last century generated almost all of the stock market's gains.

Investments in publicly-listed U.S. stocks enhanced shareholder wealth by more than $55.1 trillion in aggregate during the 1926 to 2022 period, even while investments in the majority (58.6%) of the 28,114 individual stocks led to reduced rather than increased shareholder wealth.

10 Blue-Chip Bargains To Boost Your Retirement Portfolio Yield (5)

Out of 28,141 companies, the top 25 accounted for 33% of all stock market profits of the last century.

Apple (AAPL) accounts for 5% of all US stock market profits since 1926.

You can see the challenge. A single big winner can supercharge your portfolio, but most companies won't do very well. Half of them is likely to crash and never recover.

This is where the Zen portfolio strategy comes in.

Zen Portfolio Strategy: Boost Your Favorite Index Funds

The idea behind the Zen strategy is Ritholtz Wealth Management's core ETF strategy augmented with high-conviction stock ideas.

ETFs provide instant diversification and can't go to zero (outside of an apocalypse in which money has no meaning).

You can see how the last two years have been challenging for the 60-40 retirement portfolio, which is down 6%, not counting inflation. Our Zen Retirement portfolio was less volatile than the 60-40 during the 2022 inflation crash and has delivered far better returns.

By using a 50% index fund as your core and then investing the other 50% into ten high conviction ideas, 5% each, you can take the solid long-term returns of the stock market and boost them by a significant amount.

Core ETF Strategy Yield Growth (Morningstar) Consensus LT Total Return Potential
BAGPX 60-40 2.0% 6.40% 8.4%
10 Retirement Blue-Chips 4.70% 16.40% 21.10%

ZEN Retirement Portfolio

3.4% 11.40% 14.8%

(Source: Morningstar, FactSet)

A 50% 60-40 retirement portfolio augmented by these 10 retirement blue chips significantly boosts the dividend yield. And according to the FactSet consensus of all analysts, it also could double the long-term income growth and total returns.

How did I find 10 companies that could potentially transform an 80% stock, 20% bond retirement portfolio into an income growth portfolio that analysts think could beat the Nasdaq in the future?

How To Find The Best Retirement Blue Chips for Your Needs

Here's the simple screen I did to find five ultra-yield blue chips and five hyper-growth blue chips, which combine into a 10-stock approach that can help a 60-40 retirement portfolio.

Screening Criteria Companies Remaining % Of Master List
1 BHS Rating "reasonable buy, good buy, strong buy, very strong buy, ultra value buy" 261 51.68%
2 Non-Speculative 224 44.36%
3 Blue-Chip Quality Or Better(10+ Quality) 220 43.56%
4 Credit Rating Investment Grade (BBB- or better) 186 36.83%
5 LT Total Return potential 10+% 107 21.19%
6 Sort By Yield 0.00%
7 Top 5 Yielders 5 0.99%
8

Sort By LT Return Potential

0.00%
9

Top 5 Total Return Stocks

0.00%
10 Under "tickers" select these 10 stocks 10 1.98%
Total Time 3 minutes

I always start out every screen targeting my core.

Everyone's core is different, the fundamentals they care most about.

But for me, I always seek to provide actionable ideas, which are:

  • non-speculative
  • blue-chip quality
  • at fair value or better
  • investment-grade credit ratings
  • 10+% long-term consensus total return potential (market matching or better)

Speculative stocks are usually three kinds of companies.

  • junk bond rated (less than BBB-) by definition, "speculative" debt = a speculative company
  • undergoing a challenging turnaround (WBA, AT&T, 3M, VFC, and LEG are all famous examples from former or current aristocrats)
  • new companies with short track records of profits and valuation data

10 Blue-Chip Bargains To Boost Your Retirement Portfolio

So what are these 10 blue-chip bargains that could potentially transform a retirement portfolio into a high-yield dividend growth powerhouse?

Let's break them down by style.

The 5 Ultra-Yield Ultra SWANs

Let's review the fundamentals of these ultra yielders.

They yield 8.7% on average, are 22% historically undervalued, and have a 93% average safety score.

  • approximately 0.5% risk of a dividend cut at any given time
  • 1% during an average recession
  • 2% during a Great Recession, Pandemic level severe recession

S&P rates them BBB+ stable with an average 30-year bankruptcy risk of 6% and long-term risk management in the top 24% of all global companies.

And the FactSet consensus from all analysts covering these companies is for 5% to 6% long-term growth, driving 14% to 15% long-term total return potential and 14% to 15% long-term income growth if you reinvest the dividends.

  • 5% to 6% long-term dividend growth consensus if you spend the dividends instead of reinvesting them

The 5 Hyper-Growth Blue Chips

These hyper-growth blue chips have a 0.7% yield but growth consensus of 27% to 28% and 28% to 29% long-term return potential.

They have an A- stable average credit rating, and according to S&P, long-term risk management in the top 15% of global companies.

10 Retirement Blue-Chips: Yield + Growth = Maximum Long-Term Income

Here are the fundamentals for all ten retirement blue-chips designed to boost a 60-40 retirement portfolio.

A 4.7% yielding stock portfolio that's 18% historically undervalued with an average BBB+ credit rating and long-term risk management in the top 19% of global companies.

The current FactSet median long-term growth consensus is 16% to 17% with 21% to 22% long-term return potential and income growth for dividend re-investors.

  • 16% to 17% income growth for those spending all their dividends

A 5% position in each of these blue chips provides good risk management across six sectors, and you also have the full diversification benefits of owning 30% in the S&P and 20% in bonds.

  • 30% S&P
  • 20% bonds
  • 5% into ten high-conviction chips

This Zen Retirement portfolio is simple and historically highly effective at beating the 60-40. You can even potentially outperform the S&P and Nasdaq.

Historical Returns Since 2002

While historical returns are no guarantee of future results, they can give us an idea of whether current analyst forecasts for future returns and income growth are reasonable or historically consistent.

The Zen Retirement portfolio delivered far better returns than the 60-40, the S&P, and even the Nasdaq, with lower volatility during the most severe bear markets.

It only fell 32% during the Great Recession and had twice the negative volatility-adjusted total returns (Sortino Ratio) of the 60-40.

Consistent outperformance of not just the 60-40 for the last 23 years but even the S&P and Nasdaq.

And what about income growth?

Here are the historical income growth rates of the 60-40, the Zen Retirement portfolio, and the Nasdaq.

  • 60-40: 10.4% annually
  • Zen Retirement Portfolio: 21.8%
  • Nasdaq: 20.8%

Twice the long-term income growth and a yield on cost of 132% after 23 years of income compounding.

Short-Term Return Potential

The average 12-month fundamentally justified total return potential for these ten companies is 29%.

  • The returns you'd expect if a company grows as expected and returns to historical fair value within 12 months
  • S&P 12-month fundamentally justified total return potential is 6%

Consensus Total Return Potential Through 2026

  • If and only if each company grows as analysts expect
  • And returns to historical market-determined fair value
  • This is what you will make.

Sorted By Discount To Fair Value

British American Tobacco (BTI)

Lear (LEA)

Altria (MO)

ServiceNow (NOW)

TC Energy (TRP)

Enbridge (ENB)

Netflix (NFLX)

MPLX (MPLX) - K1 tax form

Apollo Global Management (APO)

NVIDIA (NVDA)

And now compare that to the S&P 500.

S&P 500

Analysts expect the S&P to deliver about 22% returns in the next three years, or 7% annually.

  • 12-month fundamentally justified upside potential: 29% vs 6% S&P
  • 3 year total return potential consensus: 66% (18% annually) vs 22% S&P (7% annually)

Twice the return potential of the S&P over the next three years, all part of a complete, diversified, and risk-managed portfolio.

Risks To Consider

First, it's important to remember that all portfolios will sometimes experience volatility, even those designed to minimize the downside.

Historically speaking, this is a low volatility portfolio, but it has experienced four bear markets since 2002, and in 2011's debt ceiling crisis, it fell almost 20%.

And these are just the summary of declines. The true declines are much more dramatic when living through them.

This portfolio has fallen as much as 13% in a month, and the future monthly decline potential is 10% (conditional value at risk 5%).

In other words, at some point in the future, you should expect this portfolio to fall 10% in a single month.

If you can't emotionally handle this? Then it would be best if you had a more conservative portfolio.

And remember the importance of annual rebalancing.

Vanguard's data confirms what Morningstar also found: Annual rebalancing provides the best volatility-adjusted returns plus is more tax efficient.

Rebalancing is very important because this is how hyper-growth stocks can help boost income over time.

The strong returns they generate allow you to buy more high-yield blue chips with profits that eventually become much higher than any savings you could invest yourself.

If your time horizon is under 10 years, then you don't necessarily need to worry about income growth and can adjust your stock bucket to be 100% high yield.

Also remember that all of this data I'm presenting, from the safety and quality scores to the valuations and growth forecasts, are constantly changing.

This is why optimal portfolio risk management isn't just buying one stock, the highest yielding or fastest growing, for example.

Today, BTI has excellent fundamentals and a very low-risk dividend. However, in a few years, that might change.

History is littered with former dividend aristocrats such as GE, AT&T, WBA, CTL, and bankrupt Winn-Dixie and Kmart.

Annual rebalancing allows you to confirm that the thesis of a company and its fundamentals remain intact.

Bottom Line: Combining ETFs With Stocks Can Boost Your Retirement Portfolio Yield, Income Growth, and Returns

My family fund is 67% ETFs and 33% high-conviction stocks.

The optimal asset allocation will depend on everyone's individual needs.

Our Zen portfolio series uses 50% core ETFs and 50% stocks to enhance the fundamentals beyond what the ETFs can deliver.

Our Zen Retirement portfolio has the diversification benefits of a 60-40, including all 500 S&P companies, while nearly doubling the dividend yield and growth potential through 10 high-yield and hyper-growth blue chips.

The key to long-term success with investing is finding a reasonable and prudent strategy that will likely meet your needs.

A strategy you understand, have confidence in and can avoid panic selling out of at the worst possible time.

Ultimately don't focus on trying to achieve some perfect strategy, there's no such thing.

Try to create the optimal strategy for your needs to harness the power of wealth and income compounding from the world's best companies.

Companies run by skilled and trustworthy management, and millions of employees working hard for you, so that one day you won't have to.

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10 Blue-Chip Bargains To Boost Your Retirement Portfolio Yield (28)

Dividend Kings helps you determine the best safe dividend stocks to buy via our Automated Investment Decision Tool, Zen Research Terminal, Correction Planning Tool, and Weekly Screening Videos.

Membership also includes

  • Access to our 13 model portfolios (all of which are beating the market in this correction)

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Click here for a two-week free trial, so we can help you achieve better long-term total returns and your financial dreams.

10 Blue-Chip Bargains To Boost Your Retirement Portfolio Yield (2024)

FAQs

Are blue-chip stocks good for retirement? ›

And the real benefit to these stocks is that they pay a dividend which increases your total return. Over time, a strong total return is the key to building wealth. Here are seven high-yield blue-chip stocks to help you meet your retirement goals no matter where you are on your investment journey.

What is the average return on blue-chip shares? ›

In general, the average rate of return on blue-chip stocks is around 10%, which is similar to the indices that they are featured on. A good indicator of blue-chip status is if the company is listed on a renowned stock index.

What are the best blue-chip stocks to buy? ›

Compare the best blue-chip companies
Company (Ticker)SectorMarket Cap
UnitedHealth (UNH)Health care$420.65B
Nvidia Corp. (NVDA)Technology$2.15T
JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM)Financial$563.54B
Salesforce (CRM)Technology$285.32B
2 more rows

What is a good portfolio mix in retirement? ›

The conservative allocation is composed of 15% large-cap stocks, 5% international stocks, 50% bonds and 30% cash investments. The moderately conservative allocation is 25% large-cap stocks, 5% small-cap stocks, 10% international stocks, 50% bonds and 10% cash investments.

What is the number 1 retirement stock? ›

Along with Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ), Pfizer Inc. (NYSE:PFE), and The Proctor and Gamble Company (NYSE:PG), Realty Income Corporation (NYSE:O) is one of the best retirement stocks to buy according to the media.

What is the best retirement portfolio for a 60 year old? ›

At age 60–69, consider a moderate portfolio (60% stock, 35% bonds, 5% cash/cash investments); 70–79, moderately conservative (40% stock, 50% bonds, 10% cash/cash investments); 80 and above, conservative (20% stock, 50% bonds, 30% cash/cash investments).

What are the cons of blue chip stocks? ›

Pros and Cons of Blue Chip Stocks

Lower returns than less established companies. Less room to grow, meaning that they are unlikely to see large gains. Expensive due to high demand.

Is it a good idea to invest in blue chip? ›

Blue chip stocks are usually less risky and thus considered safer than other stock-based investment options. That's because one of the major determining factors of a blue chip stock is that it must be a well-capitalized company, meaning it should have the financial fortitude to endure an inevitable economic downturn.

Should you hold blue chip stocks? ›

Blue-chip stocks typically have solid balance sheets, steady cash flows, proven business models, and a history of increasing dividends. For that reason, investors generally consider blue-chip stocks to be among the most secure stock investments because of their track records and performance history.

What is the most undervalued chip stock? ›

One of the most undervalued semiconductor stocks, Aehr Test Systems (NASDAQ:AEHR) is a global provider of test systems for burning-in and testing logic, optical and memory integrated circuits. For quite some time, AEHR benefited by providing testing equipment and services for the electric vehicle market.

Which blue-chip stocks pay the highest dividends? ›

Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT), Visa Inc. (NYSE:V), and Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) are some of the best blue chip dividend stocks among others that are mentioned below in our list.

What stock pays the best dividend? ›

10 Best Dividend Stocks to Buy
  • Verizon Communications VZ.
  • Philip Morris International PM.
  • PepsiCo PEP.
  • Altria Group MO.
  • Bristol-Myers Squibb BMY.
  • Medtronic MDT.
  • Gilead Sciences GILD.
  • Pioneer Natural Resources PXD.
Feb 15, 2024

Should a 70 year old be in the stock market? ›

Conventional wisdom holds that when you hit your 70s, you should adjust your investment portfolio so it leans heavily toward low-risk bonds and cash accounts and away from higher-risk stocks and mutual funds. That strategy still has merit, according to many financial advisors.

How much should a 75 year old have in stocks? ›

For example, if you're 30, you should keep 70% of your portfolio in stocks. If you're 70, you should keep 30% of your portfolio in stocks. However, with Americans living longer and longer, many financial planners are now recommending that the rule should be closer to 110 or 120 minus your age.

What is the best portfolio mix for a 55 year old? ›

As you reach your 50s, consider allocating 60% of your portfolio to stocks and 40% to bonds. Adjust those numbers according to your risk tolerance. If risk makes you nervous, decrease the stock percentage and increase the bond percentage.

What is the best stock for retirement? ›

Eastman Chemical Company (NYSE:EMN), Realty Income Corporation (NYSE:O), and Pinnacle West Capital Corporation (NYSE:PNW) remain on our list of top stocks for an early retirement portfolio due to their consistent dividend growth and strong dividend yields.

Are blue chip stocks a good long term investment? ›

Blue chips are considered safe investments due to their longstanding financial stability.

What are the disadvantages of blue chip stocks? ›

Although blue chips are reliably stable, they are unlikely to generate the same high returns as potentially riskier investments. Despite their stability, blue chip stocks can experience volatility and failure, as did some during the 2007-2008 financial crisis.

Should I keep blue chip stocks? ›

Blue Chip companies are a good place to start if you want to establish a steady and diverse portfolio. They provide an attractive investment opportunity due to their history of market stability, dividends, and capital appreciation potential.

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