SELECT LANGUAGE BELOW

Two High-Yield Dividend Stocks Have Been Removed from the S&P 500. Are They Worth Buying Now?

Two High-Yield Dividend Stocks Have Been Removed from the S&P 500. Are They Worth Buying Now?

After the inventory is taken out, the initial move is quite mechanical: all index funds and ETFs that follow the benchmark are required to sell. This results in a short-lived artificial selling pressure, which isn’t really related to the inherent business fundamentals.

For those investors looking to tune out the surrounding noise, it could be a moment worth monitoring closely.

Remember the Nvidia signal from 2009? A similar unusual signal is appearing again. Back in 2009, a “double down” signal emerged for a lesser-known chipmaker called Nvidia. Now, a company that is significantly smaller than Nvidia is showing a similar “full conviction” sign.

On June 22, S&P Dow Jones Indices removed two companies, Campbell’s (NASDAQ:CPB) and Pool Corporation (NASDAQ:POOL), replacing them with names from the semiconductor and electronics sectors. This shift indicates the growing inclination of the S&P 500 towards technology. However, both Campbell’s and Pool Corp. are now part of the S&P Small Cap 600, meaning they haven’t vanished from the market entirely; they’re simply less prominent.

1. Campbell’s: A High-Yield Story

Campbell’s current dividend yield is over 7%. The stock has faced challenges for more than a year, weighed down by stock price declines, ongoing costs from its acquisition of Sovos Brands in 2024, and operational issues following an ERP system transformation. As the stock prices dropped, yields inevitably rose.

This dividend has been consistently paid for 51 years now. The payout ratio stands at about 76% of profits—not exactly lean, but it is sufficiently covered. Plus, the cash flow looks even better. Fifty-one years of dividends really means something when both earnings and cash flow back them up.

On the other hand, Campbell’s Rao brand is branching out beyond just numbers. The company’s trailing net sales surpassed $1 billion, and in May 2026, Campbell’s took a significant step by acquiring a 49% stake in La Regina, an Italian maker of Rao’s sauces. It’s vital for keeping that artisanal touch in Scaffati, Italy. That’s what makes Rao’s sauces a premium product, which can be tricky to build.

But, here’s a straightforward caution: Campbell’s dividend growth has been rather slow. Over five years, dividends have only increased by about 1.26%. This aspect is crucial for investors seeking income that at least keeps up with inflation. Right now, Campbell’s is more of a high-yield, low-growth dividend scenario—not really a compounding interest story. Whether that’s suitable for you will depend on your investment approach.

2. Pool Corp.: The Dividend Growth Champion

Pool Corp’s yield may seem modest compared to Campbell’s—around 2.4% right now—but the real story lies in its trajectory.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Telegram
WhatsApp

Related News