Dividend Delights: Three Stocks to Flout the Flock

The masses, in their eternal folly, gaze upon the S&P 500’s gilded peak and conclude the hunt for dividend treasures is over. How pedestrian! To mistake a market’s height for a desert of opportunity is like supposing a full moon leaves no room for stars. Three stocks-NextEra Energy, Chevron, and Enterprise Products Partners-invite the discerning investor to sip from a different well, one where yield and resilience dance in paradoxical harmony.

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1. NextEra Energy: A Utility That Defies the Dullness of Its Trade

NextEra’s 3.1% yield is a demure figure, a whisper rather than a shout in the cacophony of the market. Yet herein lies its charm: it is a peacock in a flock of sparrows. While the S&P 500 clucks along at 1.2%, NextEra’s dividend growth-10% annually for a decade-proves that even utilities may embrace the drama of progress. One might call it the Jane Austen of energy stocks: steady, intelligent, and quietly accumulating power.

The secret? Florida’s insatiable appetite for newcomers (and their electricity) paired with a solar and wind empire that thrives on the world’s newfound virtue signaling. To invest in NextEra is to bet on the impossible: that regulation and innovation might coexist without mutual annihilation. A wager worth making, I daresay.

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2. Chevron: The Energy Aristocrat with a Debt to Pleasure

Chevron’s 4.3% yield is a siren song to those who mistake stability for stagnation. For 38 years, it has raised dividends like a well-rehearsed sonata, even as oil prices waltzed through chaos. How? By balancing the ledger with the elegance of a Victorian dandy-low debt, an integrated model, and a willingness to acquire the occasional Hess (now smoothly digested, thank you).

Venezuela’s political farce, once a blot on its pristine ledger, has curiously resolved itself. One suspects the real drama was always in the books, not the headlines. Chevron, like a seasoned actor, plays to the footlights of balance sheets, not the fickle applause of market sentiment. To own it is to possess a relic of reason in an age of frenzy.

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3. Enterprise Products Partners: The Tortoise Who Forgot to Race

At 6.8%, Enterprise’s distribution yield is a sum so substantial it could make a philosopher weep. Yet its growth is the tortoise’s gait-slow, steady, and indifferent to the hare’s antics. For 27 years, it has raised payouts with the patience of a watchmaker. Its midstream empire, built on pipelines and tolls, is the financial equivalent of a well-tailored suit: unassailable in its logic, immune to the froth of fashion.

Investors craving immediacy will yawn; those who admire the poetry of compounding will bow. Enterprise is the market’s answer to the question, “What if income and infrastructure could share a waltz?” The answer, dear reader, is both tedious and transcendent.

The S&P 500, that gilded index of mediocrity, is but a stage for the crowd’s fantasies. True wealth, as always, lies in the shadows-where NextEra’s solar panels glint, Chevron’s pipelines hum, and Enterprise’s tortoise-like resolve grinds on. September, that underrated month, offers a rare gift: the chance to buy not what is popular, but what is perspicacious. 😉

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2025-09-03 12:24