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2 High-Yield Dividend Stocks You Can Buy With $100 Now and Hold at Least a Decade

  • Shares of Brookfield Infrastructure and Novo Nordisk offer an average yield that is more than triple the market average.

  • Novo Nordisk lowered its forward outlook in response to a problem that has most likely been resolved already.

  • Brookfield Infrastructure’s pipelines and data centers aren’t particularly thrilling, but they do generate predictable cash flows.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Novo Nordisk ›

Despite a recent dip in response to unfavorable economic data, the stock market’s bull run seems unstoppable. From April 4 through Aug. 8, the S&P 500 index shot up a whopping 25.9%.

For dividend-seeking investors, a buoyant stock market can be a little annoying. Stock prices rising faster than profits means most dividend payers offer unattractive yields. The average yield from dividend payers in the benchmark S&P 500 index is an unattractive 1.2% at recent prices.

Most dividend yields aren’t particularly desirable right now, but there are still some underappreciated gems hiding in plain sight. Novo Nordisk (NYSE: NVO) and Brookfield Infrastructure (NYSE: BIP)(NYSE: BIPC) offer an average yield of 3.9% at recent prices. Plus, they could raise their payouts at a mid-single-digit percentage, or better, every year from now until you want to retire.

You don’t have to be wealthy to put your money to work with these stocks. At recent prices, $100 is enough to buy a share of both. Here’s why that looks like a great idea for folks who would like to grow their passive income streams.

Image source: Getty Images.

From the end of 2023 through Aug. 7, shares of Novo Nordisk lost more than half their value. Earnings reported by the Denmark-headquartered company that markets Ozempic and Wegovy have performed much better than the stock.

If we ignore currency exchange rates, U.S. investors who buy the stock at recent prices would receive a 3.44% yield if Novo Nordisk holds the payout flat. Holding dividend payments steady isn’t in this company’s nature. From 2020 through 2024, it raised annualized dividend payments by 120% in its native currency.

Shares of this drugmaker have been under intense pressure since management lowered its sales outlook for 2025. On Aug. 6, the company told investors to expect revenue to rise between 8% and 14% this year. That’s much slower than the 13% to 21% range management provided in May.

On the bottom line, management lowered its operating earnings growth outlook to a range of between 10% and 16% this year. This is a slower rate of growth than we had been expecting, but it’s still pretty good for an established pharmaceutical business.

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