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I've found the five best dividend stocks for 2019 and they're not technically dividend

stocks.

I'm going to reveal these five stock picks along with two types of investments everyone

needs in their portfolio.

In fact, I have a retirement fund that's exclusively invested in one of these and earn

double-digit returns every year.

We're talking dividend investing today on Let's Talk Money.

Beat debt.

Make Money.

Make your money work for you.

Creating the financial future you deserve.

Let's talk money.

Joseph Hogue with the Let's Talk Money channel here on YouTube.

I want to send a special shout out to everyone in the community, thank you for taking a little

of your time to be here today.

If you're not part of the community yet, just click that little red subscribe button.

It's free and you'll never miss an episode.

I love dividend stocks and we've had a few really popular dividend investing videos here

on the channel but there are two huge cash flow investments that people sometimes overlook.

These two investments trade like dividend stocks but are a special type of company.

We're talking about master limited partnerships (MLPs) and real estate investment trusts or

REITs.

Not only are these two of the best cash flow investments you can make but it's a great

way to protect your money from ordinary stocks.

In this video, I'll explain why these two types of stocks aren't dividend stocks.

I'll reveal the danger in treating them like other stocks and why they should be part

of everyone's portfolio.

I'll then share the five best investments in MLPs and REITs you can make this year .

First, there are two very important differences between these two types of stocks and other

dividend stocks that you must know about.

First is that they are pass-through companies which means they pass profits through to investors

and taxes are treated differently.

These companies and their investors get special tax breaks because of the way they handle

cash flow and profits.

Second, and this is the one that most investors miss, is that these companies can't be valued

like other dividend stocks.

These companies own assets like real estate and pipelines that mean a huge amount of depreciation

on the income statement.

They take that depreciation off their earnings to lower taxes but it also means that earnings

are a terrible view of profitability for the business.

So if you ever hear anyone talking about the price-to-earnings ratio of an MLP or a REIT,

they don't know what they're talking about.

You can't use the P/E ratio with these stocks.

There is a special way to value each of these types of stocks and I'll show you how to

do that for each.

On to these special types of dividend investments though.

First, let's look at the master limited partnership.

MLPs are a company set up to own energy assets, usually oil or natural gas pipelines and storage

facilities.

MLPs get a fee from energy companies for letting them use those pipelines and storage.

This is one of the benefits to MLP investing is that profits don't necessarily depend

on the price of oil.

The stock price is going to bounce around a little if the price of oil jumps or crashes

but the company is still collecting those fees on the volume of oil pumped through the

pipelines . Compared to an oil company where sales are directly affected by the price of

oil, MLPs are a little safer here because of those fees.

Since MLPs pass their income and expenses on to investors through special reporting,

the company doesn't pay taxes.

That's a very efficient way to hold the assets and it's why many oil companies have

sold off their pipelines into an MLP company.

With MLPs you don't get that double taxes problem you get with regular companies where

the company pays taxes on profits first then investors pay taxes again on any returns.

Another benefit to MLPs is that the cash return you receive isn't all taxed in the same

year either.

Some of those dividends count to lower your cost in the shares so you don't pay taxes

on them until you sell the stock . And if you pass these through to your heirs in an

estate, taxes are never paid on that portion of the return.

Because they pass almost all the income on to investors, MLPs have some of the highest

cash return of any types of stocks.

The dividend on the Alerian MLP ETF, a fund that holds shares of MLPs, pays an 8.4% annual

dividend yield.

There is one downside to MLPs I want to point out before getting to how to value these stocks

and my two favorite MLP picks.

MLP investors get a K-1 form, a special tax form each year, from the company that details

the return.

This means a little more work at tax time to report the investment but any online tax

software makes it easy to file taxes on these.

Now on to how to value an MLP.

Remember, you can't use the price-to-earnings ratio here.

These companies have a huge amount of depreciation that makes earnings misleading but it doesn't

affect actual cash flow.

So what we're going to do is use what's called price-to-distributable cash flow or

price-to-DCF.

Finding this value for distributable cash flow, the amount of money the company has

available to return to investors, is important also because it gives us an idea of sustainability.

A company can't pay out more than is available forever so it's a good metric to make sure

that dividend isn't going to be cut any time soon.

I'll show you how to calculate DCF yourself but all MLPs will calculate it on their reporting.

I do it myself only because I like to double-check the numbers coming out of the company and

make sure I'm comparing stocks with the same calculation.

Here's the table, and again don't get freaked out because this is always provided

to you in reporting.

To find how much money the company has available to distribute, you take the cash flow from

operations, this is all going to be found on the Statement of Cash Flows, and you remove

any spending on capital and income from non-controlling interests.

That gives you sustainable DCF which is what the company can return to investors and still

keep operations running smoothly.

While sustainable DCF is a better measure, most people use the DCF as reported because

it's sometimes the only number reported.

To get to DCF, you also add back that income from non-controlling interests as well as

working capital reported.

The big one here is adding back this proceeds from asset sales.

This is technically proceeds the company can return to investors, a company can't forever

be selling its assets and still keep business running so that's why we use that sustainable

DCF if it's available.

With this number, you can find that valuation with the price-to-DCF or you can find how

much the company is returning to investors for what's called the distribution coverage

ratio.

This is how much DCF the company earns versus how much it pays out.

This last measure is important because an MLP that pays out more than it's Distributable

Cash Flow can't do so forever.

You see here the coverage ratio for a group of MLPs and that the average is around a DCF

that's 1.2 times the distribution.

This means the company has cash flow about 20% higher than what it's returning but

you also see some companies here that save back more or much less.

Now on to my two favorite MLP picks for 2019.

DCP Midstream, ticker DCP, is an integrated MLP which means it owns energy assets throughout

the supply chain from pipelines to processing plants and storage.

This gives it better pricing power and more control negotiating with energy companies.

DCP hedges most of it's exposure to natural gas prices and 80% of its revenue is that

fee-based so it's not going to be as volatile as even other MLPs.

The company pays an 8.6% dividend and a 1.35-times distribution coverage which means that dividend

is relatively safe.

Pipeline volume increased 35% in the third quarter versus last year so cash flow is on

a good trend and shares trade for about 8-times DCF.

Our next MLP pick here is Energy Transfer or ticker ET. ET is a little more diverse

than DCP both geographically and by assets.

The company owns natural gas pipelines through several regions as well as some oil pipeline

and export facilities.

Energy Transfer has one of the best project backlog profiles I've seen in MLPs meaning

it has a lot of projects lined up for growth.

Cash flow jumped 40% year-over-year in the second quarter so this is a company growing

fast.

The 8.2% dividend yield is covered by about 1.2-times DCF and shares trade for about 8.8-times

DCF.

One last note about MLPs here is that you shouldn't own them in a retirement or tax-advantaged

account.

The profits here are already taxed-advantaged so you lose that benefit if you hold them

in an IRA or Roth IRA.

Our next dividend stock investment here is real estate investment trusts or REITs and

these are my favorite of the two.

Those of you in the community know I'm a big believer in real estate and I love REITs

because they give everyone the opportunity to get into property investing but without

that big down payment needed.

We've got another video on the channel detailing the seven property strategies I used after

getting out of the Marine Corps to get started with no money.

I'll leave a link to that in the video description below but the fact is that direct property

investing can still be a lot of time and work.

So REITs are special companies set up to manage commercial real estate and pay out the cash

flow to investors.

REITs can specialize in a property type so apartments, office, retail, warehouse and

self-storage or they can hold a mix of properties.

Most REITs hold properties across the country so it's a great way to diversify your portfolio

of individual properties, getting exposure to other regions and property types.

REITs pay no corporate taxes as long as they pay out at least 90% of income to investors

so like MLPs this makes for a great way to manage property, avoid that double taxation

and means huge cash dividends for investors.

In contrast to MLPs, REITs can be held in a retirement account and that's how I invest.

The dividends from a REIT are either taxed as income or at the capital gains tax rate

so you would owe taxes on these if you hold them in a regular account.

Holding them in a retirement account means I don't pay any taxes for decades on all

that cash flow.

This is a great strategy for any high-yield investment like dividend stocks, REITs or

bonds.

Hold these in a retirement account so you pay no taxes.

Your other stocks where most of the return is through those capital gains when you sell

it, those you can hold in a regular investing account.

There are primarily two types of REITs, an equity REIT which actually owns the properties

and a mortgage REIT which invests in real estate loans.

Now these mortgage REITs pay higher dividends but they tend to be more volatile, especially

when interest rates are rising . I've invested in mortgage REITs but prefer equity REITs

as a better long-term investment.

Just like with MLPs, you can't rely on reported earnings for a REIT because of that high amount

of depreciation they get from real estate.

Instead, we use a measure called Funds from Operations or FFO.

FFO is very similar to that DCF we saw with MLPs.

You take the reported net income of the REIT and add back depreciation but minus out any

gains they made on property sales.

Those property sales are a source of income but not something the REIT can do forever

and expect to stay in business.

Investors also look at the adjusted funds from operations this AFFO, which takes out

capital expenditures.

Capex here is money the company spends to keep its properties in good shape so maintenance

spending.

Remember, the idea is to find how much cash the company has available to distribute without

cutting into money it needs to run the business.

Again, like the DCF calculation for MLPs, you don't necessarily have to do this yourself

because it's always reported by the company.

It's just a good idea to understand the concept and be able to double-check the company's

reporting.

You use FFO just like our other metric so you can take the price of the REIT over FFO

to compare the valuation to other REITs.

You can also get a coverage ratio of FFO over the dividend to see how safe the yield is

for the stock.

Now I'm going to share three REITs that I own and love for strong dividend yields

and price appreciation.

Dividend yields are a little lower for REITs compared to MLPs but you tend to have higher

price appreciation in the shares.

This is because those real estate properties appreciate and REITs tend to hold a little

more back for growth than MLPs.

First here is Extra Space Storage, ticker EXR, which owns over 1,600 storage facilities

across the country . This is a great property type because it's very easy to manage so

costs are extremely low and that means lots of cash flow.

Let's face it, we Americans love to buy lots of stuff we don't have room for and

that means rented storage space.

Occupancy at EXR is at 93%, almost completely full, and the percent of the population using

self-storage has risen to 8%, doubling over the last 20 years.

Shares have produced a 715% total return over the last decade, the highest among storage

REITs and second-highest against all REITs.

The dividend has grown 115% over the last five years and pays a 3.6% yield.

Our next REIT is Ventas or ticker VTR, a leader in medical and senior living properties.

The company is well-diversified with about 55% of net operating income from senior living

facilities, nearly a fifth from medical office space, another 7% from university-based research

centers and the rest from a mix of health centers and loans.

I love the healthcare REIT space because of that broad demographic trend and the stability

in healthcare spending.

The senior living space has been weak lately on over-supply but is turning around and the

boomer generation is just now aging into the segment.

Shares pay a 5.2% dividend yield and have produced an annualized 13.5% return over the

last two decades.

The shares trade for about 15-times FFO on a really strong outlook for growth.

Our last REIT pick isn't a REIT itself but a fund that holds REITs, the Vanguard Real

Estate ETF, ticker VNQ.

The fund holds shares of 184 REITs across all property types.

The VNQ is the best way to get that instant diversification for your real estate portfolio

because it holds pretty much everything and the expense fee on the fund is one of the

lowest you'll find.

Shares pay a 4.4% dividend yield and have produced a total return of 11.3% annually

over the last decade.

Do not neglect these two types of dividend stocks for your portfolio.

Not only do they pay dividend yields of three- and four-times the rest of the market but

they're going to give you exposure to assets that will smooth out risk of a crash in other

stocks.

Remember to value these stocks differently with that DCF or FFO calculation and check

out some of those five great dividend picks I highlighted.

We're here Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays with the best videos on beating debt, making

more money and making your money work for you.

If you've got a question about money, just subscribe to the channel and ask it in the

comments and we'll answer it in a video.

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