2 Dividend Stocks to Double Up on Right Now

If you are looking for dividend stocks right now, consider United Parcel Service (UPS +0.95%) and Enterprise Products Partners (EPD +1.18%). If you own either one, you might even think about doubling up on the position. Here’s why you’ll like this turnaround stock and this North American midstream energy giant.

United Parcel Service is nearing the upturn

Parcel delivery service UPS has been working on a major business overhaul. It has been cutting staff, closing older facilities, and investing in new technology, all of which require material upfront costs. It has also been shifting away from high-volume, low-margin customers, thereby reducing revenues. Quarterly earnings have been unpleasant, but there are green shoots appearing.

Image source: Getty Images.

Notably, despite an overall decline in the company’s U.S. revenue, revenue per piece has been increasing. That is exactly what you would expect to see given the company’s efforts to become a smaller and more profitable business. At this point, management expects 2026 to be an inflection point, with the second half of the year showing improvement over the first half.

That said, the dividend yield is a very high 6.7%, and the company has signaled that it expects to maintain the dividend at its current level this year. If you can handle a turnaround stock, UPS could be a good dividend pick for your portfolio as it nears a business upturn. Still, more conservative income lovers will want to keep close tabs on the dividend payout ratio, which is currently hovering around 100%.

Expand

NYSE: UPS

United Parcel Service

Today’s Change

(0.95%) $0.93

Current Price

$98.33

Key Data Points

Market Cap

$83B

Day’s Range

$97.68 - $99.04

52wk Range

$82.00 - $122.41

Volume

58K

Avg Vol

6.3M

Gross Margin

18.53%

Dividend Yield

6.74%

Enterprise Products Partners moves oil, but it doesn’t produce it

The geopolitical conflict in the Middle East has oil prices surging. Enterprise Products Partners isn’t really affected because it charges fees for moving oil and natural gas around the world. Its fee-based business is built on a massive portfolio of energy infrastructure assets, including energy pipelines. That’s the toll-taker business that backs Enterprise’s giant 5.8% yield.

Notably, the distribution has been increased annually for 27 consecutive years regardless of the direction oil prices are heading. That’s basically as long as Enterprise has been a public entity, showing both a commitment to returning value to unit holders via distribution growth and the resilience of the business through the energy cycle.

Distributable cash flow covered the distribution by 1.7x in 2025. And the master limited partnership also has an investment-grade-rated balance sheet. It is a rock-solid income stock, and that won’t likely change when oil prices come back down to earth again. If you are looking at the energy patch for opportunities, Enterprise stands out on the income front.

Expand

NYSE: EPD

Enterprise Products Partners

Today’s Change

(1.18%) $0.44

Current Price

$37.76

Key Data Points

Market Cap

$81B

Day’s Range

$37.49 - $37.87

52wk Range

$27.77 - $38.22

Volume

842K

Avg Vol

4.4M

Gross Margin

12.86%

Dividend Yield

5.83%

The downside of Enterprise is that it is a slow-and-steady tortoise. The bulk of its growth comes from gradually increasing fees. Above that, it needs to build or buy energy infrastructure, which is time-consuming and costly. This is the type of income investment you need to buy and hold for the long term to see the biggest benefit. And the yield will likely make up the lion’s share of your return over time.

Different investors will like these dividend stocks

UPS will interest investors willing to take on a bit more risk, given its turnaround. However, if the company is right about the inflection point coming in the second half of 2026, buying now will get you in just before the business shows real signs of improvement. Enterprise, meanwhile, is a slow and boring income investment in an industry known for volatility. Investors drawn to energy because the sector is in the news may prefer it over an oil producer, given its ability to generate consistent cash flows regardless of where energy prices are heading.

This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pin