3 Dividend Stocks That Are Perfect for Retirement

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If you have entered or are nearing retirement, then you're probably looking for stocks that can offer you a healthy dose of income. High-yielding Brookfield Infrastructure Partners (NYSE: BIP), Enviva Partners (NYSE: EVA), and W.P. Carey (NYSE: WPC) can all do just that. However, there's more to the stories here than just dividends. Here's a quick rundown on why these three dividend stocks could be perfect additions to your retirement portfolio.

Yes to dividends, no to drama

Keith Speights (Brookfield Infrastructure Partners): Retirees want a lot of some things and very little of others. You can put dividends into the former category and drama in the latter. Brookfield Infrastructure Partners offers retirees plenty in the dividend department with relatively little drama.

A piggy bank with the word dividends written above it
A piggy bank with the word dividends written above it

Image source: Getty Images.

Brookfield Infrastructure's distribution currently yields a whopping 5.56%. The partnership thinks it can increase its distribution by at least 5% annually. It has easily topped that goal in the recent past, with the distribution soaring nearly 47% over the past five years.

But a high yield isn't so attractive to retired investors if it comes along with a tremendous amount of volatility and worries about the sustainability of the distribution program. That shouldn't be a problem for Brookfield Infrastructure. The company focuses on infrastructure assets such as communications towers, energy transmission lines, ports, railroads, and toll roads. These kinds of assets provide a reliable revenue stream that enables Brookfield Infrastructure to keep those distribution payments flowing.

The company continually looks for opportunities to expand. And it sometimes sells assets to buy more promising ones. For example, Brookfield Infrastructure sold off its stake in a Chilean electricity transmission business in early 2018 and is redeploying its cash to buy stakes in a natural gas pipeline in India and a natural gas gathering and processing business in Western Canada.

Such wheeling and dealing contributes to Brookfield Infrastructure's growth. Maybe there's a little drama with this stock, but it's the kind that retirees will like.

Take a chance on this super-high yield

Brian Stoffel (Enviva Partners): I'm still decades away from retirement age and tend to shy away from dividend-paying stocks. For Enviva -- which manufactures wood pellets in the American Southeast for use by European and Asian power plants -- I make a small exception.

I first bought shares in August 2016. Since then, the stock is up 18% -- roughly on par with the S&P 500. When you throw in the effect of reinvested distributions, however, the returns are much better: 42%, to be exact. That's because Enviva currently offers a distribution of $2.53 per share per year -- equivalent to an 8.8% yield at today's prices.