This Rock-Solid Dividend Stock Will Reward You Through Thick and Thin

This Rock-Solid Dividend Stock Will Reward You Through Thick and Thin


  • WM is underperforming the S&P 500 in 2025.

  • The company’s core business is performing well, but results in recycling and healthcare have been disappointing.

  • WM is forecasting gobs of free cash flow in 2025 and 2026, which supports future dividend raises.

  • 10 stocks we like better than WM ›

It’s easy to give up on dividends when the major indexes are roaring to all-time highs. After all, what good are a few percentage points of yield when the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) is up 17% year to date?

WM (NYSE: WM), formerly Waste Management, sold off after reporting third-quarter 2025 earnings. The stock has gone practically nowhere over the past year despite the broader market rally.

Here’s why WM is a great buy for risk-averse investors looking to boost their passive income.

A person looking at a pile of materials in a recycling center.
Image source: Getty Images.

For the third quarter, WM reported $1.98 in adjusted diluted earnings per share, missing analyst consensus estimates for $2.01. That’s just 1% growth compared to the same quarter in 2024. WM’s core collection and disposal business generated record results in the latest quarter. But neither its healthcare solutions nor its recycling processing and sales segments delivered.

WM operates an integrated waste collection, transportation, and disposal business for residential, commercial, and industrial customers. It also has a growing recycling and renewable energy business, driven by converting landfill gas into reusable pipeline-quality gas. WM has also been growing its healthcare solutions business, which provides environmental services for the healthcare industry.

Healthcare solutions revenue came in below expectations, as WM said it was deferring some planned price increases to prioritize customer lifetime value.

Revenue declined by $60 million in the recycling processing and sales segment due to lower market prices for recycled commodities, including a 35% drop in the blended average price of single-stream commodities. Single-stream recycling incorporates different materials, like glass, cardboard, and paper into one bin rather than separating these materials out during the collection process. This approach can boost recycling participation and collection costs, but it increases processing costs.

Demand for recycled materials is down, as WM received just $68 per ton for single-stream recycled commodities, down from $101 per ton a year ago. WM is guiding for $75 per ton for 2025, down from its prior guidance of $80 per ton. WM also received $2.56 per Renewable Fuel Standard credit, down from $3.08 a year ago. The decline in single-stream recycling commodities and renewable credits underscores market shifts in monetizing sustainability, a major source of capital expenditures for WM in recent years.


finance.yahoo.com
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