Retirees: Get 5% Yields From These 2 Blue-Chip Stocks

Here’s why BCE Inc. (TSX:BCE)(NYSE:BCE) and RioCan Real Estate Investment Trust (TSX:REI.UN) should be on your radar.

| More on:
retire

Canadian pensioners are searching for top income stocks to add to their TFSA portfolios.

Let’s take a look at BCE Inc. (TSX:BCE)(NYSE:BCE) and RioCan Real Estate Investment Trust (TSX:REI.UN) to see why they might be attractive picks.

BCE

BCE has long been a popular stock among Canadian retirees, and there is little reason for that to change.

Why?

The company recently closed its $3.9 billion acquisition of Manitoba Telecom Services in a deal that launches BCE into the top spot in the Manitoba market and gives the communications giant a strong base in central Canada to expand its presence into the western provinces.

Over the past decade, BCE has also invested heavily in the media space, acquiring a TV network, specialty channels, radio stations, sports teams, and an ad agency.

In addition, the company owns an extensive network of retail stores.

When you combine these assets with the world-class wireless and wireline network assets, you get a very powerful business that interacts with most Canadians on a weekly, if not daily, basis.

Think about it.

Any time a person in this country sends a text, calls a friend, checks e-mail, streams a movie, downloads a song, watches the news, or listens to the weather report, the odds are pretty good that BCE is involved somewhere along the line.

Revenue growth doesn’t knock the ball out of the park, but the company generates significant free cash flow, and that’s the key to supporting the dividend.

BCE’s payout provides a yield of 4.7%.

RioCan

RioCan has interests in about 300 retail locations across Canada.

The company’s core tenants tend to be large, well-established businesses that provide recession-resistant products, such as groceries, pharmaceuticals, discount goods, and everyday household items.

Demand for RioCan’s properties remains robust, and the company is a doing a good job of reducing debt. At the end of 2016, RioCan’s debt-to-total-asset ratio was 40% compared to 46% at the same time the previous year.

RioCan has a number of retail developments underway that will expand the REIT’s footprint by 3.8 million square feet. The company is also pursuing a residential project where up to 10,000 units could be built at RioCan’s top locations in six core markets.

RioCan pays a monthly distribution of 11.75 cents per unit. The current yield is 5.3%.

Should you buy?

The payouts at both companies should be safe, and an equal investment in BCE and RioCan would provide an average yield of 5% today.

That’s pretty good in the current environment.

Fool contributor Andrew Walker has no position in any stocks mentioned.

More on Dividend Stocks

engineer at wind farm
Dividend Stocks

TFSA Investors: 1 Top Canadian Stock Worth Buying With $7,000

An outperforming, defensive dividend stock is worth buying with $7,000 for a TFSA portfolio.

Read more »

ETF stands for Exchange Traded Fund
Dividend Stocks

The #1 Index Fund I’d Hold in My Portfolio Forever — No Hesitation

Anchor your portfolio forever with the XDIV ETF – a low-cost ETF that delivered 13.6% in annual returns and pays…

Read more »

Train cars pass over trestle bridge in the mountains
Dividend Stocks

A Reasonably Priced Safety Stock That Canadian Retirees Might Want to Know About

CN Rail (TSX:CNR) is starting to get too cheap to pass up for value investors.

Read more »

Map of Canada showing connectivity
Dividend Stocks

Don’t Buy BCE Stock Until This Happens

BCE stock clearly has attractive qualities, but I believe patient investors may get a better opportunity ahead.

Read more »

a woman sleeps with her eyes covered with a mask
Dividend Stocks

The ETFs That Canadians Are Sleeping on But Shouldn’t Be Right Now

Canadians are sleeping on as these ETFs that offer income diversification and long-term potential right now.

Read more »

chart reflected in eyeglass lenses
Dividend Stocks

2 Dividend Giants That Look Attractive After Recent Pullbacks

Given their resilient underlying businesses, strong long-term growth prospects, attractive dividend yields, and discounted valuations, these two dividend stocks look…

Read more »

dividend stocks are a good way to earn passive income
Dividend Stocks

How to Structure a $50,000 TFSA for Practically Constant Income

This simple four stock TFSA portfolio can take $50,000 and turn it into $190 of growing passive income every month.…

Read more »

Colored pins on calendar showing a month
Dividend Stocks

This TSX Stock Pays a 4.6% Dividend Every Single Month

This monthly-paying TSX stock combines a 4.6% yield with strong tenant demand and solid cash flow.

Read more »