2 Ultra-High-Yield Dividend Stocks to Skip, and 1 You Should Buy for Income

Key Points

High-yield dividend stocks are alluring if you like to collect dividend income. In theory, the higher a stock's dividend yield, the more income you can generate from every dollar you invest. The reality is that higher-yielding dividend stocks often have higher risk profiles.

When it comes to high yields, Ford (NYSE: F) , UPS (NYSE: UPS) , and Enbridge (NYSE: ENB) certainly look enticing. Their payouts range from nearly 6% for Ford and Enbridge to almost 7% for UPS. That's significantly higher than the S&P 500 's sub-1.5% dividend yield.

However, only Enbridge offers a very bankable income stream. That's why you should buy the energy stock to earn income while skipping the high-yield payouts of Ford and UPS.

2 Ultra-High-Yield Dividend Stocks to Skip, and 1 You Should Buy for Income

An ultra-low-risk, high-yielding dividend stock

Enbridge operates a diversified energy infrastructure platform built around stable utility and pipeline operations. Its four core franchises -- liquids pipelines, gas transmission and midstream, gas distribution and storage, and renewable power -- produce very stable cash flow, with 98% coming from cost-of-service or contracted frameworks. The company's low-risk business model produces extremely predictable results. Enbridge has achieved its annual financial guidance for 19 years in a row. That's impressive, considering it experienced two significant recessions --- the financial crisis and the pandemic -- and several other periods of energy market volatility.

The company pays out 60% to 70% of its stable cash flow in dividends each year . It also has a strong investment-grade balance sheet. That provides it with billions of dollars of annual capacity to invest in organic expansions and bolt-on acquisitions. Enbridge has a multibillion-dollar backlog of commercially secured expansion projects that should come online through the decade's end. The company estimates that it has the fuel to grow its cash flow per share at a 3% to 5% annual rate in the future . That should enable it to increase its dividend by around a similar annual rate, further extending its growth streak, which hit 30 straight years in 2025.

Ford's dividend is running low on fuel

Ford has a spotty track record of paying dividends. The iconic automaker has had to suspend its dividend twice over the past couple of decades because of adverse market conditions .

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