It’s the final day of 2025. As I write this pre-market, the S&P 500 is up 17.3% and on track to book its third consecutive year of positive annual returns.
Yesterday, I read in Bloomberg that all 21 analysts it surveyed believe the index will be up in 2026, delivering a fourth consecutive year of gains. It also noted that since the index’s October 2022 low, it has risen 90%.
When analysts are this optimistic, I get concerned. While analysts are generally bullish, this level of agreement is rare. What could possibly go wrong?
The “Dogs of the Dow” strategy, which selects the 10 highest-yielding stocks from the Dow Jones Industrial Average at the beginning of each year, was up 17.8% through Dec. 26.
On Wednesdays, I typically discuss a stock or stocks that have hit a new 52-week high or low in the prior day’s trading.
To finish out the year, I thought I’d take a page out of the Dogs of the Dow strategy, using new 52-week lows as my guiding criteria for picking winners in 2026.
In 2025, 105 stocks had at least 30 new 52-week lows and a market cap of over $1 billion. Of those, 30 have dividend yields of 2.75% or higher.
Here are the five highest-yielding stocks to buy for 2026 based on the criteria above.
Happy New Year!
Alexandra Real Estate Equities (ARE) has hit 35 new 52-week lows in the past 12 months. Its stock yields 10.7%.
The REIT (real estate investment trust) specializes in office and lab space for the life sciences, agtech, and technology industries in U.S. cities such as Boston, San Francisco, and San Diego. As of Sept. 30, it had 39.2 million square feet of leasable space.
Many of its tenants are biotech companies. The industry is in the fifth year of a downturn post-COVID. As a result, it is disposing of non-core real estate outside its major megacampuses. That will not only strengthen its balance sheet but enable it to focus on fewer, higher-quality assets.
ARE stock is down 49% in 2025.
Flowers Foods (FLO) has hit 68 new 52-week lows in the past 12 months. Its stock yields 9.1%.
The Georgia-based maker of baked goods has done so since 1919. Today, its brands include Nature’s Own, Dave’s Killer Bread, Wonder, and Tastykake. Its 10,200 employees operate 44 bakeries across 19 states. In 2024, its sales were $5.1 billion.
