How $20,000 Across 4 TSX Stocks Could Deliver $1,000 in Passive Income

Unlock the benefits of TSX stock investments with insights on building a portfolio and earning over $1,000 per year.

| More on:
Key Points
  • A diversified $20,000 TSX portfolio can yield approximately $1,024 annually by investing $5,000 each in four key stocks: Dream Industrial REIT, Surge Energy, Gibson Energy, and Propel Holdings.
  • Dream Industrial REIT and Surge Energy provide solid dividend incomes through industrial property management and energy sector exposure, with respective yields of 5.15% and 5.04%.
  • Gibson Energy and Propel Holdings add diversity with infrastructure and fintech investments, offering strong dividend returns of 6.05% and 4.2%, albeit with differing risk profiles.

The TSX Index is packed full of dividend stocks across a wide array of industries and sectors. With just $20,000, you can build a diversified portfolio that can produce an attractive income stream. Here is a four-stock portfolio allocated evenly with $5,000 that could fetch you around $1,024 of dividend income every year.

top TSX stocks to buy

Source: Getty Images

A TSX REIT stock

The first TSX stock to buy is Dream Industrial Real Estate Investment Trust (TSX:DIR.UN). It yields 5.15% today. A $5,000 investment in Dream Industrial would buy you 368 units at today’s price of $13.58. That investment would earn $21.47 monthly, or $257.60 annualized.

Dream Industrial owns and manages 74.1 million square feet of multi-tenanted industrial properties across Canada, the United States, and Europe.

Right now, it sits with 96.8% occupancy. Most of its leases have annual contracted rental rate growth. Likewise, its average lease rate sits considerably below market, so it has natural organic growth in lease turnover or renewal.

This REIT still trades at a 19% discount to its private market value. Even after a recent run-up, it looks like attractive value today.

A Canadian oil stock

If you want exposure to energy, given the conflict in the Middle East, Surge Energy (TSX:SGY) is an interesting stock. It yields 5.04% today. A $5,000 investment would buy 484 shares at $10.31 per share. That investment would earn $20.82 monthly or $249.74 annualized.

With a market cap of only $1 billion, this is on the smaller spectrum for energy stocks. However, it’s a good way to get exposure to the sector and earn some regular income.

The company has decent reserves (16 years), high-return assets, and a focus on oil liquids (89% of production). Surge earns attractive free cash flows and has significant torque to stronger energy prices. With low debt, it can continue to reward shareholders in the form of an elevated dividend and share buybacks.

A TSX infrastructure stock

Gibson Energy (TSX:GEI) gives you exposure to the energy industry, but with less commodity exposure/risk. It yields 6.05% today. A $5,000 investment would buy 171 shares at today’s price of $29.07. You would earn $76.95 quarterly, or $307.80 annualized.

Gibson is a leading energy storage and export terminal provider. 75% of its income is from take-or-pay contracts, which help critically support its dividend. It is aiming for 7% annual earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) growth over the coming five years.

For an outsized dividend and some decent growth, this is definitely one TSX dividend stock to consider.

A Canadian fintech stock

If you are looking for a TSX stock with a little more risk, but also more upside, you may want to add Propel Holdings (TSX:PRL). It yields 4.2% right now. A $5,000 investment would buy 235 shares at a price of $21.20 today. You would earn $52.88 per quarter or $211.52 per year.

Propel provides small, specialized loans for non-prime consumers. This is a risky segment. However, Propel uses a proprietary AI platform to prudently underwrite loans and manage risk. The company has been growing rapidly. However, the stock is down due to broader market worries around a slowing economy.

It is a riskier business, so you do need to be aware that this TSX stock is volatile. However, if Propel can continue to prove its smart growth strategy, there could be a nice stock rebound. You collect a growing dividend while you wait.

COMPANYRECENT PRICENUMBER OF SHARESDIVIDENDTOTAL PAYOUTFREQUENCY
Dream Industrial REIT$13.58368$0.0583$21.47Monthly
Surge Energy$10.31484$0.043$20.82Monthly
Gibson Energy$29.07171$0.45$76.95Quarterly
Propel Holdings$21.20235$0.225$52.88Quarterly

Fool contributor Robin Brown has positions in Propel. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Propel. The Motley Fool recommends Dream Industrial Real Estate Investment Trust and Gibson Energy. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Dividend Stocks

Concept of multiple streams of income
Dividend Stocks

4 Dividend Stocks I’d Happily Double My Position in Today

Considering their strong fundamentals, reliable income streams, and visible growth opportunities, these four dividend stocks are attractive buys for investors…

Read more »

monthly calendar with clock
Dividend Stocks

How to Structure a TFSA With $14,000 for Lifelong Monthly Income

Cautious investors can lock in higher yields on meaningful market corrections of 10–20%.

Read more »

Two seniors walk in the forest
Dividend Stocks

The Best Canadian Stocks to Buy and Hold Forever in a TFSA

These stocks have safe and growing earnings and in turn, dividend payments, making them two of the best stocks to…

Read more »

senior couple looks at investing statements
Dividend Stocks

Canadians: How Much Money Should Be in a TFSA to Retire?

These two TSX stocks can be excellent picks to help get your TFSA balance to a level that can comfortably…

Read more »

Data Center Engineer Using Laptop Computer crypto mining
Dividend Stocks

The Data Centre Buildout Is Just Beginning: 3 Stocks to Watch

The data-centre boom isn’t just a chip story, it’s an infrastructure, engineering, and equipment buildout that could run for years.

Read more »

Two seniors float in a pool.
Dividend Stocks

3 Top TSX Dividend Stocks to Buy Before Summer

Want dividends that keep showing up while you unplug this summer? These three TSX picks could fit the bill.

Read more »

dividends can compound over time
Dividend Stocks

The Canadian Companies That’ve Been Quietly Raising Their Dividend Payouts

Long-term investors should have these three dividend growers on their watchlist for potential buys on market corrections.

Read more »

RRSP (Registered Retirement Savings Plan) on wooden blocks and Canadian one hundred dollar bills.
Dividend Stocks

2 Dividend Stocks I’d be Comfortable Holding in an RRSP Indefinitely

The two top RRSP stocks for long-term wealth creation include TD Bank and CNR Rail, the leaders of their respective…

Read more »