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3 Dividend Stocks Up 8%, 16%, and 17% So Far in 2024 to Buy in December

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2024 is almost over, but there’s still time left in the year to identify quality companies that are worth buying now. Some folks may be looking for high-octane growth stocks with room to run, whereas others may be in search of companies that can pay them dividend income no matter what the stock market is doing.

Dividend stocks offer a way to participate in the market without all of the gains depending on the stock price going up. Investors can use dividend income to reinvest in the stock market, which can compound wealth over time.

Honeywell International (NASDAQ: HON), Enterprise Product Partners L.P. (NYSE: EPD), and Southern Company (NYSE: SO) have rewarded investors with gains and dividend income, rising 8%, 16%, and 17% respectively so far this year. Here’s why these three dividend stocks stand out as great buys in December.

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Lee Samaha (Honeywell): Industrial conglomerate Honeywell is about to join the industrial breakup party, which has been raging for the last half-decade. Peers like United Technologies (which spun off into Otis Worldwide, Carrier Global, and a merger with Raytheon Technologies to become RTX), General Electric (now GE Aerospace, GE HealthCare Technologies, and GE Vernova), and myriad other smaller conglomerates have all gone down that route. Honeywell’s latest announcement strongly suggests it will take the same option.

The company announced its board of directors is continuing its portfolio evaluation “including the potential separation of its Aerospace business.” The action is in line with calls for a breakup from an activist investor and makes sense given the elevated valuations in the aerospace sector — Honeywell’s largest business.

In addition, the company has already announced it will spin off its advanced materials business in 2025 or 2026 and has agreed to sell its personal protective equipment business for $1.325 billion in cash.

Moreover, other parts of Honeywell’s portfolio of businesses, including industrial automation, building automation, and a 54% stake in the quantum computing business, Quantinuum, are positioned in highly attractive end markets.

For example, another industrial company, Emerson Electric, has restructured its portfolio to focus on automation, and Johnson Controls is also restructuring to focus on commercial building automation. The portfolio actions promise to release value for shareholders, and investors can earn a current dividend yield of 1.9% (a figure above the S&P 500 average of 1.3%) while they await updates.

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