3 Dividend Stocks to Buy Now That Are Crushing the S&P 500 in 2025

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Home security specialist Allegion is a company with secure long-term growth prospects.

  • Pitney Bowes' cost-cutting has delivered results, and shareholders are benefiting.

  • In times of uncertainty, investors tend to gravitate toward utility stocks like Southern.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Allegion ›

The S&P 500 has rocketed higher in recent weeks but is still down year to date at the time of this writing. Trade tensions have eased somewhat, but there remains a great deal of macroeconomic uncertainty -- not to mention the ongoing "stroke of the pen risk," which refers to the dangers that companies can face from sudden changes in national policy.

In these uncertain times, investors who might be looking for reliable sources of passive income that they'll be able to count on no matter what the economy does may want to take a closer look at Allegion (NYSE: ALLE), Pitney Bowes (NYSE: PBI), and Southern Company (NYSE: SO). All three companies regularly raise their dividends and are outperforming the S&P 500 so far in 2025.

Here's why they stand out as top buys now.

A person holding a clipboard and wearing personal protective equipment looking at a stack of packages for shipment.
Image source: Getty Images.

Allegion continues to outperform in an uncertain environment

Lee Samaha (Allegion): Allegion is a provider of security products for homes and businesses. Its dividend sports a higher yield than the S&P 500 and an 11-year streak of annual payout increases. Moreover, if management's forecast for long-term double-digit percentage earnings growth is anything to go by, those dividends will likely grow significantly in the coming years.

In addition, during Allegion's recent investor day presentation, management told investors it plans to deploy 30% of its available cash flow toward the dividend, up from just 23% in recent years.

Its growth plans center on the secular growth opportunity in the convergence of mechanical and electronic security products and software. This means locks, electronic panels/readers, door accessories, frames, windows, and automatic closing doors -- a wide range of products.

These higher-tech versions of everyday hardware are becoming increasingly essential in institutional buildings (education, healthcare, etc.), commercial spaces (offices, industrial facilities, etc.), and multifamily residences, as web-enabled technology brings more functionality to its solutions.

For example, with Allegion's security products, access to areas can be monitored and controlled remotely, creating more secure environments and more efficient workplaces.

Organic revenue growth of 4% aligns with management's long-term expectations (which assume mid-single-digit percentage growth plus a few points of growth from consolidating a fragmented market via mergers and acquisitions). Management recently affirmed its guidance for 2025 adjusted earnings per share (EPS) in the $7.65 to $7.85 range. That guidance factors in $80 million in costs associated with tariffs.