Produce Cash in Your RRSP Account With These 3 Dividend Stocks

Dividend income is an important way to build cash within an RRSP. Snag 4.63% in yield from these solid dividend stocks, including Manulife Financial Corp. (TSX:MFC)(NYSE:MFC).

| More on:
The Motley Fool

A rising interest rate environment is generally a headwind for dividend stocks. Why? First, income investors will move to bonds, as the corporate bond coupon rates creep up; second, high-yield dividend stocks are often high-borrowers too, which means profits get pinched as interest on borrowed money rises.

Investors with a long-term horizon can still pursue dividend stocks and do just fine — more than fine! But it’s important to buy dividend stocks that also appreciate to produce capital gains.

These three dividend stocks are attractive right now because they are fair to undervalued. Buying them in equal amounts would produce an average yield of 4.63%, which will compound to produce 25% of an initial investment as cash in hand after five years.

EnerCare Inc. (TSX:ECI)

First up is EnerCare, providing shareholders with a 5.55% yield. It’s an example of “high-yield + sustainable business,” not “high-yield + risky business.”

Homes need water heaters, which is where EnerCare slides in, as this is one of its cornerstone business segments. EnerCare has stable business for the simple matter that renting a water heater is convenient compared to owning your own water for $1,000 to $2,000 as an upfront cost (approximately three to five years of renting).

EnerCare’s stock price dropped 22% from its high in April 2017 and since then there have been three interest rate hikes. The price drop was not an interest rate thing; it was a missed earnings thing! That is four consecutive quarters of missed earnings.

At current stock price levels, EnerCare has good value, and it has cash flows to pay the dividend. The next two quarters are also forecast to be strong and could turn the stock momentum around.

Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (TSX:CM)(NYSE:CM)

The smallest of the big banks offers a sizable 4.6% dividend. I own shares of CIBC for the dividend and the fact that it has a lower P/E compared to other big banks. I’m okay with the implied higher risk.

Having recently traveled south of the border, it was very clear to me that CIBC is trying to make in-roads to diversify business: there were ads and billboards galore. As a shareholder, it wasn’t an eye sore.

Manulife Financial Corporation (TSX:MFC)(NYSE:MFC)

Manulife is an insurance company, with a 3.6% yield, but did you know about its healthy wealth management business? I’m siding with Fool contributor Chris MacDonald; I agree that Manulife’s Asia focus is good for portfolio diversification AND its business. Here’s why.

Manulife is acting on something we’ve known about for many years now, although not often talked about: there’s money in Asia!

In 2017, Forbes reported that Asia has 637 billionaires, more than Europe and the U.S. These ultra-rich are also relatively young, with an average age of 55 years. Who’s jockeying to manage their wealth?

Here’s a hint: Roy Gori ran Manulife’s Asia division for two years before being promoted to CEO of the whole company. Manulife’s revenue from its Asia business also speaks volumes.

Take home

Manulife rounds out my three picks that collectively produce 4.63% income annually in an RRSP, making you slowly richer, while you invest in strong business that are diverse and strong.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Brad Macintosh owns shares of CANADIAN IMPERIAL BANK OF COMMERCE.

More on Dividend Stocks

Business success with growing, rising charts and businessman in background
Dividend Stocks

5 TSX Stocks With High Dividend Growth to Buy Now

These TSX stocks sport a high dividend growth rate and are known for consistently rewarding their shareholders with increased cash.

Read more »

Various Canadian dollars in gray pants pocket
Dividend Stocks

Canadian Blue-Chip Stocks: The Best of the Best for May 2024

These two blue-chip stocks are up in 2023, sure, but have seen even more growth in the last few decades.…

Read more »

Couple relaxing on a beach in front of a sunset
Dividend Stocks

Passive Income: How to Make $33 Per Month Tax-Free by Doing Nothing

Hold monthly paying dividend stocks such as Exchange Income in your TFSA to begin a tax-free stream of passive income…

Read more »

data analyze research
Dividend Stocks

Is Telus Stock a Buy on a Dip?

Telus is down more than 20% over the past year and now offers a great dividend yield.

Read more »

A plant grows from coins.
Dividend Stocks

2 Top Dividend-Growth Stocks to Buy in May

These two dividend stocks saw major growth after earnings that promised more was coming in the future. And now could…

Read more »

Dots over the earth connecting the world
Dividend Stocks

Best Stocks to Buy in May 2024: TSX Telecommunication Services Sector

The telecommunication services sector is currently going through an upheaval. It is a good time to buy these stocks.

Read more »

Dividend Stocks

Bulletproof Income: How to Earn Safe Dividends With Just $10,000

These Canadian dividend stocks have the potential to sustain and increase their payouts for years under all market conditions.

Read more »

warning or alert
Dividend Stocks

Attention, Cautious Investors: This Top Dividend King Just Climbed 7% and Can Keep Going

Fortis (TSX:FTS) stock is still down 10% in the last year but up 7% on strong earnings that demonstrate more…

Read more »