The power of dividend investing is pretty well-known these days. Higher-yielding stocks tend to offer higher returns over time than low- or no-yield stocks, according to research from Jeremy Siegel and others. In fact, the 20 best-performing survivor stocks from the original S&P 500 in 1957 are all dividend payers.

What's more, reinvesting dividends acts as a "bear-market protector and return accelerator," according to Siegel. The extra shares purchased and accumulated at higher dividend yields during down periods act as a protector in falling markets, and these extra shares rising in value turn into a "return accelerator" when prices rise.

As the recent economic crisis illustrated all too well, however, you can't buy just any high-yielding stock. Dividends that get cut or suspended entirely can wreak havoc on a stock price -- and thus, your portfolio.

Combine high yield with low risk
Fortunately, there are steps you can take to lessen your chances of buying one of these train wrecks. James Early, advisor of our Motley Fool Income Investor service, suggests looking at the payout ratio, for starters. That's simply the percentage of a company's net income used to pay its dividend. Obviously, the higher the payout ratio, the tougher it is for a company to meet its dividend obligation. James looks for a payout ratio less than 80% for safer companies, and a sub-60% or even sub-50% payout for companies you consider risky.

To further stack the odds on your side, you can limit your search to companies that have grown their dividend over the past three years or so. That eliminates the less stable or erratic dividend payers.

I constructed a screen to find some promising high-yield, low-risk financial companies for further research. I made sure the stocks met the following criteria:

  • Market cap > $1 billion.
  • Payout ratio < 60%.
  • Three-year dividend growth > 0%.
  • Sector, as defined by Capital IQ: financials.

Here are the top 10 highest yielders the screen produced:   

Company

Market Cap
(in millions)

Payout Ratio

3-Year Cumulative
Dividend Growth

Dividend Yield

OneBeacon Insurance (NYSE: OB)

$1,332

48%

33%

5.8%

Cincinnati Financial (Nasdaq: CINF)

$5,183

51%

13%

5.0%

Hudson City Bancorp (Nasdaq: HCBK)

$6,830

53%

88%

4.6%

Bank of Hawaii

$2,228

47%

10%

3.9%

NYSE Euronext (NYSE: NYX)

$8,496

51%

140%

3.7%

Federated Investors (NYSE: FII)

$2,764

54%

23%

3.6%

American National Insurance

$2,312

58%

1%

3.5%

M&T Bank (NYSE: MTB)

$10,298

56%

12%

3.2%

Brookfield Properties (NYSE: BPO)

$8,828

14%

4%

3.2%

Erie Indemnity

$3,707

56%

20%

3.1%

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's.

These stocks are great places to start your research, but they're not formal recommendations.

What this means
Siegel sums it up nicely in his book, The Future for Investors: "Bear markets are not only painful episodes that investors must endure, but also an integral reason why investors who reinvest dividends experience sharply higher returns."

Whether in bear or bull markets, there's a reason why the top-performing stocks over the decades are all dividend payers. If you're lacking that type of exposure in your portfolio, you should take the first steps now toward finding stable dividend payers designed to weather any market cycle.

If you're interested in high-yielding, quality stocks in other industries, check out my archive page.