Finance
3 Magnificent S&P 500 Dividend Stocks Down 43%, 20%, and 53% to Buy and Hold Forever | The Motley Fool
The market is overlooking the bigger picture for these three names. That means opportunity for you.
Like bargains? Need dividends? No problem. Several of the S&P 500‘s stocks fit both bills at this time, with a bunch of them boasting the makings of a true “forever” holding. Here’s a rundown of three of these best bets right now.
Pfizer
There’s no denying that Pfizer (PFE -0.66%) isn’t quite the pharmaceutical powerhouse it used to be. The loss of patent protection on its blood thinner Lipitor in 2011 was a blow it never quite got over, but it would also be naïve to believe the company’s research and development (R&D) and acquisitions are as strong now as they were in the past. The drugmaking business has also seemingly become even more competitive in the meantime.
That’s why, after a burst of bullish brilliance during and because of the COVID-19 pandemic (Pfizer’s Paxlovid was an approved treatment), this stock’s peeled back 53% from its late 2021 peak.
The long-awaited winds of change are finally blowing, even if in a way that feels more disruptive than helpful. Activist investor Starboard Value is shaking the chains, so to speak, calling Pfizer out for its failures on the drug-development front and the acquisition front. Starboard specifically points out that 2023’s $43 billion acquisition of oncology company Seagen has yet to show meaningful benefit given its high cost, and adds that Pfizer’s failed to turn the 15 drugs it was touting as potential blockbusters in 2019 into those major moneymakers.
In CEO Albert Bourla’s defense, the coronavirus contagion slowed R&D for most pharmaceutical companies, if only by complicating the logistics of drug trials. Nevertheless, Starboard makes several fair points.
But what does this mean for current and prospective shareholders? While it’s typically better when any organization recognizes its own weaknesses and implements much-needed changes, Starboard Value’s involvement should still drive this overdue overhaul.
Nothing about this drama changes anything about Pfizer’s dividend, by the way. It’s not only paid one every quarter like clockwork for years now, it’s also raised its net annual payment for 15 years in a row. This streak isn’t in any real jeopardy, either.
Newcomers will be plugging into the stock while its forward-looking dividend yield stands at 5.8%.
Realty Income
There’s a decent chance you’ve never heard of Realty Income (O -3.16%). Don’t let its lack of notoriety fool you. This $55 billion S&P 500 constituent is here to stay, and thrive.
Realty Income is a landlord. It’s structured as a real estate investment trust, or REIT. REITs are investments that trade like stocks, but pass along the bulk of any rental profits generated by that REIT’s underlying real estate portfolio. It’s an easy way for investors to be in the rental real estate business without the usual hassle of buying, selling, finding tenants, and performing maintenance on a property.
There are all kinds of real estate investment trusts, ranging from office buildings to apartment complexes to hotels. Even by REIT standards, though, Realty Income is a bit unusual. Its specialty is retail space.
This potentially raises red flags. The brick-and-mortar retailing industry is largely on the defensive, contending with the rise of online shopping. Don’t be too rattled, though. Realty Income’s tenant list includes the likes of Walmart, FedEx, and Dollar General, just to name a few. These are major companies with staying power, in addition to their vested interest in staying put once they’ve established brick-and-mortar roots.
That’s what this REIT’s numbers say, anyway. Even with the COVID-19 pandemic picking off retailers en masse in 2020, Realty Income’s occupancy for the year held at 97.9%.
Those aren’t the only numbers that make a strong bullish argument for owning this dividend payer that’s currently yielding (on a forward-looking basis) just under 5%. Not only has Realty Income paid a dividend every month — yes, a monthly dividend — for the past 54 years, it has also raised its payouts every quarter for the past 27 years.
Franklin Resources
Last but not least, add Franklin Resources (BEN 0.69%) to your list of S&P 500 dividend stocks to buy. It’s down 43% from its 2021 post-pandemic peak, and lower by a whopping 65% from its record high reached in late 2013. That weakness has pumped its forward-looking dividend yield up to a healthy 6%.
Investors may be more familiar with the outfit than they realize. This is the company behind Franklin Templeton mutual funds, although it operates several other profit centers beyond the Templeton brand. Technological solutions, alternative lending, and real estate are all within its wheelhouse.
Anyone who’s kept tabs on this company likely knows that it hasn’t always been a stellar performer. While certainly respected within the investment management industry, Franklin struggled to hold on to investors’ money in 2015 and 2016. You may recall that the market had been soaring for some time then, and investors were looking for performance beyond what this investment manager could offer.
Much has changed since then, however. Namely, through a few strategic acquisitions like last year’s purchase options-trading technology company volScout, this mutual fund giant can now deliver more of what investors — individual as well as institutional — are clamoring for.
It’s not exactly easy to see the upside yet. The 2022 bear market that followed the pandemic’s wind-down has made it difficult to determine exactly how much business this company should be doing, and how much profit it should be producing. It’s only easy to see that profit margins still appear to be crimped right now.
Even so, the investment management’s dividend has grown every year for the past 44 years. Given that the bulk of its revenue is driven not by its funds’ performances but by fees based on a percentage of the assets it’s managing, the cash flow it needs to maintain these payments is actually rather secure.
Finance
How Natura &Co Is Transforming Finance with Generative AI on SAP S/4HANA
For a company navigating one of the most consequential transformations in its history, financial clarity is not optional—it is essential. Natura &Co, the Brazilian personal care and cosmetics group behind iconic brands such as Natura and Avon, has long been committed to combining purpose-driven business with commercial performance. After a period of strategic portfolio reshaping, including the divestiture of its Aesop and The Body Shop holdings, the company is now sharpening its focus on profitability and operational excellence across Latin America and global markets.
At the center of that effort sits a deceptively complex challenge: understanding, in real time, which revenue and cost factors are driving or eroding gross margin across a highly diversified business. For years, answering that question meant manual reporting, delayed insights, and finance teams spending valuable time on data gathering rather than analysis.
That’s now changing, thanks to a co-innovation initiative developed together with SAP and Numen, a global SAP partner specializing in digital transformation and enterprise software implementation.
From manual reporting to proactive decision intelligence
The project’s goal was to replace a labor-intensive gross margin analysis process with a generative AI application embedded directly into Natura &Co’s financial workflows. Built on SAP Business AI Platform, SAP’s unified foundation integrating business technology, data, and AI capabilities, the application connects directly to data in SAP S/4HANA to provide finance teams with automated insights and narrative recommendations in real time, without the need for manual data pulls or offline reporting.
The application enables users to explore revenue, cost, and margin drivers interactively, identifying at a glance which elements are protecting or eroding margin performance across markets and product lines. Crucially, human oversight remains central to the design: the AI application generates insights, while finance professionals retain full control over interpretation and decisions.
“The implementation of gross margin analysis using AI in SAP S/4HANA marked an inflection point in the analytical capability of our finance area,” said Rogério Dias Garcia, tech manager, ERP Latam, Natura &Co. “We overcame delays and raised the standard of insights by integrating margin analysis from SAP S/4HANA with a large language model connected via the SAP AI Core layer. This architecture allowed us to provide, in an agile, secure, and completely anonymous manner, a stratified and precise view of gross margin offenders and protectors—discriminating exactly which revenue or cost elements were driving market performance.”
A collaborative architecture for scalable AI adoption
Natura &Co’s application derived from a prototype SAP partner Numen created in early 2024 at SAP’s global Hack2Build on business AI, leveraging the generative AI capabilities of SAP Business AI Platform. The solution was designed and developed through close collaboration between Natura &Co, Numen, and SAP. From the outset, the approach was to align AI adoption with concrete business priorities, ensuring the application would be scalable and production-ready rather than a standalone prototype.
Numen brought deep SAP implementation expertise to the project, combining knowledge of SAP S/4HANA architecture with hands-on experience in building solutions on SAP Business AI Platform. The technology stack—SAP S/4HANA, SAP AI Core, SAP Fiori, and SAP Business Technology Platform—provided the secure, integrated foundation needed to connect financial data with generative AI capabilities in an enterprise context.
“SAP enabled the transformation by providing the technological foundation and expert support,” said Carlos Aravechia, head of Data Design & Intelligence at Numen.
The success of the project has validated a broader conviction at Natura &Co: that generative AI, embedded directly in ERP workflows, can fundamentally reposition finance from a transactional function to a strategic business partner.
A blueprint for other businesses
The Natura &Co project demonstrates a pattern that other organizations can replicate, particularly those running SAP S/4HANA. The combination of structured ERP data with the contextual reasoning capabilities of large language models creates a foundation for decision intelligence that goes well beyond traditional business intelligence tools.
The project was built within a six-month co-innovation sprint and went live in August 2025. It is currently in use across Natura &Co’s Equador operations.
Looking ahead, Natura &Co is already planning the next phase: integrating Joule Agents to further automate the extraction of standard analytical content and deepen the AI-driven optimization of financial processes.
“The success of this initiative validates the transformative potential of embedded AI within our ERP,” Dias Garcia noted. “We are now ready to move forward—deepening these insights and integrating the capability of Joule Agents to maximize the extraction of standard content and further optimize our business decisions.”
For SAP customers evaluating how to move from AI experimentation to AI in production, the Natura &Co project offers a concrete, replicable model: start with a high-value, well-defined business process, embed AI directly into existing workflows, and build in human oversight from the start.
Finance
Low-income Chinese girl aces gaokao, inspires live-streamers offering help
A girl from a disadvantaged rural family in central China topped this year’s gaokao, attracting numerous live-streamers eager to finance her education, which she declined.
The home of 18-year-old secondary school graduate Han Yaping in a Henan province village was recently bustling with live-streamers.
This attention came after Han achieved an impressive score of 699 out of 750 in the gaokao, China’s national college entrance exam.
She has received offers from China’s two leading universities, Tsinghua University and Peking University.
Han’s accomplishment is particularly remarkable given her family’s impoverished circumstances.
Her mother suffers from ankylosing spondylitis, an inflammatory arthritis affecting the spine, preventing her from working. Her father, who earns a living through farming and odd jobs, serves as the family’s sole provider. Han also has a younger sister.
Finance
UK financial regulator publishes landmark AI review
The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) published a landmark review on Monday that proposes recommendations to regulate the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on the financial decisions made by consumers.
The review, titled the Mills Review, anticipates that both consumers and firms will start delegating “more financial decision-making to AI systems,” including for agreements, initiating transactions, and executing decisions “within agreed parameters.” One of the key findings of the review outlined that while AI can help bridge advice gaps and “support growth,” there remain risks “associated with fraud, cyber security, and consumer harm.” Conducting the review, Sheldon Mills highlighted that “AI can also amplify risks: bias, discrimination, exclusion, opaque decision-making (particularly when multiple AI models interact), misleading or hallucinatory advice and erosion of consumer trust.”
The review stated that presently, one in five adults in the UK are “already open to AI making decisions for them,” particularly when decisions feel “complex or high stakes.” It found that roughly 26 percent of the population “trust general-purpose tools such as ChatGPT, Claude or Gemini for financial advice” with little awareness that such platforms provide no “formal routes to recourse” or protections.
Overall, the Mills Review identified four areas that it anticipates will be impacted by AI in the financial sector: “the transformation of firms,” “new consumer journeys,” “a reshaped competition landscape,” and “amplified financial crime and cyber risk.” The FCA projected the shift in how consumers and firms consult AI to take place by 2030.
The Mills Review put forth seven “priority” recommendations to be considered by the FCA Board. It recommended that any transitions to autonomous AI models be monitored and that regulatory frameworks and perimeters be adapted and secured. The review called for the strengthening of “system-wide coordination and oversight,” the scaling up of the FCA’s AI Lab to enable it to support AI models and innovation for agentic finance, and an “AI-enabled agentic supervisory model” to be built and adopted. Finally, it recommended that a trusted “public-interest AI-enabled financial capability service” be developed.
The FCA announced, in the press release, that it will launch an AI “good and poor practice publication” in late 2026.
-
Detroit, MI3 minutes ago
DPD investigating after human remains found in home on Detroit’s west side
-
San Francisco, CA18 minutes agoBay Area Teen Waymo Riders Nabbed For Allegedly Shooting Projectiles From Robotaxi
-
Dallas, TX23 minutes ago
Role Call: Tyrus Wheat looking to make most of second stint with Cowboys
-
Miami, FL30 minutes ago2026 Miami Football Early Opponent Preview, Game 8: North Carolina
-
Boston, MA33 minutes agoBoston sues social media companies over ‘addictive’ features, joining nationwide litigation
-
Denver, CO38 minutes agoPeyton Watson landing spots: Could Nuggets star actually leave Denver?
-
Seattle, WA45 minutes ago14-year-old dies in Seattle e-bike crash at Colonnade Park after losing control on steep stairs – MyNorthwest.com
-
San Diego, CA48 minutes agoSan Diego Humane Society Releases 4 rare western spotted skunks into the wild