Friday, December 26, 2025

Don’t Give Up on Dividend Stocks. Investing $7,500 in These 3 High-Yield Stocks Should Help You Generate Over $1,000 in Yearly Dividends.

  • Target continues to generate sufficient cash to cover its growing dividend.

  • Chevron can support its dividend at lower oil prices while maintaining upside potential if oil prices recover.

  • Texas Instruments is an excellent way to invest in the cyclical recovery of automotive and industrial end markets.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Target ›

There are two main ways to generate returns from stocks — capital gains and dividends.

Capital gains result from how the market values a company, whereas dividends are paid directly by the company to its shareholders. Ideally, dividend investors want to see a company grow its earnings so that its value increases (capital gains) and it can afford to pay a higher dividend.

Target (NYSE: TGT), Chevron (NYSE: CVX), and Texas Instruments (NASDAQ: TXN) have been rewarding shareholders with growing dividends for decades. But all three stocks have lost value over the last three years, whereas the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) is up 66.5%.

By investing $7,500 into each high-yield dividend stock, you can expect to generate over $1,000 in annual dividends. Here’s why all three stocks are excellent opportunities for value investors looking to give their passive income stream a jolt in 2026.

A shopping cart full of coins and a sack of money on top of sheets of U.S. $100 bills.
Image source: Getty Images.

Target is getting hit hard by pullbacks in consumer spending, especially on discretionary goods. In comparison, Target’s peer, Walmart, is capturing market share and appealing to value-seeking shoppers.

As you can see in the following chart, Target is now hovering around a six-year low, as sales have been declining for years, and operating margins remain below pre-pandemic levels.

TGT Chart
TGT data by YCharts.

In addition to macroeconomic challenges, Target has been on a public relations roller coaster due to backlash over its diversity, equity, and inclusion policies. And when Target rolled back those policies, it upset the other side of the political aisle. So in the span of just a few years, Target alienated a good chunk of its customer base.

Target is also dealing with increased shrink, largely due to theft. Shrink is a term retailers use to represent the difference between reported inventory and actual inventory. The more theft, the more missing items, and the more inventory has to be adjusted to make up for the shortfall. Target isn’t the only retailer dealing with shrink — it’s a problem at Walmart, Best Buy, and elsewhere, too. But the difference is that Target is already testing investor patience, so any additional challenges are met with less tolerance.

With so much going wrong, you may be wondering why Target is even remotely worth considering. Target is dirt cheap, trading at just 11.6 times forward earnings estimates. It also remains a cash cow, with trailing 12-month diluted earnings per share (EPS) of $8.24 and $6.59 in free cash flow (FCF) per share compared to a dividend of $4.44 per share.  To top it all off, Target has raised its dividend for 54 consecutive years and yields 5.4%.

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