The Shocking High-Yield S&P 500 Stock That Is Beating the Index 2-to-1

The Shocking High-Yield S&P 500 Stock That Is Beating the Index 2-to-1


Ford pickups
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  • Ford (F) returned 33.7% in 2025 and offers a 5.1% dividend yield. Ford doubled the S&P 500‘s performance while yielding four times more than the index.

  • Ford generated $6.7B in free cash flow through Q3 despite narrowing its EV division loss to $1.3B.

  • Ford trades at 8x forward earnings with analysts projecting 41% EPS growth in 2026.

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The S&P 500 is trading near its all-time high, propelled by relentless gains from the artificial intelligence (AI) boom. Year to date, the index has climbed over 16%, rewarding investors who bet on tech giants like Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT).

Yet amid this surge, dividends remain scarce among the top performers — most AI darlings reinvest profits into growth rather than payouts. Yet, there is one outlier in the 500 that is delivering a yield more than four times higher than the index’s average, while also demolishing the index with a 33.7% return in 2025 — double the benchmark’s pace: Ford (NYSE:F).

This blend of income and momentum makes Ford a rare value play in a growth-obsessed market. Let’s find out why.

The U.S. auto industry is hitting the brakes in 2025, with sales growth stalling amid affordability woes and shifting consumer tastes. November sales totaled 1.26 million units, down 8% from the prior year and flat month-over-month, pushing the full-year tally to just 16.1 million to 16.2 million units — a modest 2% rise from 2024 but far below pre-pandemic peaks.

Battery-electric vehicles (BEVs), once all the rage, saw their market share dip to 7.9% in November, reflecting the surge of buyers to gain last-minute deals on credits manufacturers off following the federal government curbing incentives. Hybrids and trucks held firmer, but overall demand softened as still-elevated interest rates squeezed budgets, forcing buyers to delay big-ticket purchases.

Ford, however, has sidestepped much of this turbulence through a pragmatic pivot. While pure EV players like Rivian (NASDAQ:RIVN) and Lucid Group (NASDAQ:LCID) grapple with losses, Ford’s Model e division scaled back aggressive spending, posting a narrower $1.4 billion loss in Q3 compared to deeper red ink in 2024. This restraint preserved Ford’s cash flow, funding a steady $0.15 quarterly dividend that yields 5.1% — far above the S&P 500’s 1.1% average.


finance.yahoo.com
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