The Kraft Heinz Company (KHC): Among the Best Long-Term Dividend Stocks to Buy According to Billionaires
We recently published a list of the . In this article, we are going to take a look at where The Kraft Heinz Company (NASDAQ:KHC) stands against other best long-term dividend stocks.
Dividend stocks are increasingly popular with both every day and billionaire investors. A CNBC report noted that for many, dividend stocks are always a solid choice, offering a steady income from corporate cash flow, which provides stability despite fluctuations in stock prices. With both the stock and bond markets experiencing significant volatility, these stocks are becoming even more attractive, serving as a balanced option between growth and yield for a broader range of investors.
The long-term appeal of dividend-paying stocks remains robust, especially for investors aiming to reduce risk while still pursuing growth. Ramona Persaud, portfolio manager of the Fidelity Equity-Income Fund and Fidelity Global Equity Income Fund, typically prefers high-quality companies that offer reliable dividends and are attractively priced. She highlighted that declining interest rates can benefit dividend stocks, as their yields become more appealing compared to bonds. Additionally, Persaud mentioned that lower rates could help drive broader market gains, unlike the recent performance, which was mainly driven by a few large growth stocks.
Her investment strategy focuses on companies with strong balance sheets, consistent cash flows, and significant return potential. She also stresses the importance of valuation—seeking stocks that are reasonably priced compared to their peers and historical averages—while targeting dividend yields that stand out in the current market. This blend of quality, value, and income, she believes, has contributed to the fund's strong performance in both rising and declining markets.
Dividend stocks are gaining popularity once more in the current market, following two years of losses amid the dominance of high-performing tech stocks. The Dividend Aristocrat Index, which tracks the performance of companies with at least 25 consecutive years of dividend growth, is down by a little over 2% since the start of 2025, compared with a nearly 6% decline in the broader market. This trend indicates that dividends are gaining traction, with more companies introducing dividend policies and existing dividend payers gradually increasing their payouts to attract investors. An S&P Global report projects that 408 companies in the broader market will pay dividends in 2025. Of these, nearly 350 are expected to raise their dividends over the next year, contributing to an estimated 6% growth in total dividends compared to the previous year. In the overall US market, aggregate dividend growth is forecasted to be 4.6% in 2025. Since S&P companies account for about 85% of all US dividend payments, the S&P index serves as a reliable indicator of broader dividend trends.
Dividend stocks are also a key component of many billionaire investors' portfolios. For instance, Warren Buffett has been earning billions annually from dividend stocks, setting a strong example for other investors, as his strategies are highly regarded. In fact, nearly 90% of the companies in his Q4 portfolio pay dividends, and many of them are also known for growing their dividends over time.
A closeup of an assembly line worker inspecting a newly produced jar of condiments and sauces.
To compile this list, we screened for dividend stocks that have strong financials and solid dividend policies. From that group, we picked 10 companies that were most popular among billionaire investors, as per Insider Monkey's billionaire database of Q4 2024. The stocks are ranked according to the number of billionaires having stakes in them.
At Insider Monkey, we are obsessed with hedge funds. Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter's strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 373.4% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 218 percentage points ().
Number of Billionaire Holders: 15
An American multinational food company, The Kraft Heinz Company (NASDAQ:KHC) offers a wide range of food and beverage products. The company reported mixed results for Q4 2024, with weak sales offset by improved profitability. Adjusted earnings per share were $0.84, exceeding expectations by $0.06, partly due to favorable tax effects and a reduction in shares outstanding. Revenue decreased by 5% year-over-year to $6.58 billion, falling short of the anticipated $6.66 billion, with continued softness in organic sales. In the crucial U.S. market, net sales dropped by 3.9%, as price hikes were not enough to compensate for lower sales volumes.
Despite these challenges, The Kraft Heinz Company (NASDAQ:KHC) maintained a solid financial position throughout fiscal 2024. Free cash flow grew by 6% year-over-year, reaching $3.2 billion, and operating cash flow rose by 5.2%, totaling $4.2 billion. The company also returned $2.7 billion to shareholders through dividends and share buybacks. Its quarterly dividend comes in at $0.42 per share and has a dividend yield of 5.43%, as of April 27.
Warren Buffett was the largest stakeholder in The Kraft Heinz Company (NASDAQ:KHC) at the end of Q4 2024. The hedge fund owned over 325 million shares in the company, worth over $10 billion.
Overall, KHC ranks 9th on our list of the best long-term dividend stocks according to billionaires. While we acknowledge the potential of KHC as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some deeply undervalued dividend stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns, and doing so within a shorter time frame. If you are looking for a deeply undervalued dividend stock that is more promising than KHC but that trades at 10 times its earnings and grows its earnings at double digit rates annually, check out our report about the .
READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires.
Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at .
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
15 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Is Nvidia stock a massive bargain — or a massive value trap?
AI has transformed demand for computer chips and the most obvious beneficiary of that has been Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA). With a stock market capitalization of $3.4trn, Nvidia might not seem like an obvious bargain. But what if it is really worth that much – or potentially a lot more? I have been keen to add some Nvidia stock to my portfolio, but I do not want to overpay. After all, Nvidia has shot up 1,499% in five years! So, here is what I am doing. For some companies in which I have invested in the past, from Reckitt to Burberry, I have benefited as an investor from a market being mature. Sales of detergent or pricy trenchcoats may grow over time, but they are unlikely to shoot up year after year. That is because those firms operate in mature markets. On top of that, as they are large and long-established, it is hard for them to grow by gaining substantial market share. So, market maturity has helped me as an investor because it has made it easier for me to judge what I think the total size of a market for a product or service may be – and how much of it the company in question looks likely to have in future. Chips, by contrast, are different. Even before AI, this was still a fast-growing industry – and AI has added fuel to that fire. On top of that, Nvidia is something of a rarity. It is already a large company and generated $130bn in revenues last year. But it is not mature – rather, it continues to grow at a breathtaking pace. Its first-quarter revenue was 69% higher than in the same three months of last year. Those factors mean that it is hard to tell what Nvidia is worth. Clearly that is not only my opinion: the fact that Nvidia stock is 47% higher than in April suggests that the wider market is wrestling with the same problem. Could it be a value trap? It is possible. For example, chip demand could fall after the surge of recent years and settle down again at a much lower level. A lower cost rival could eat badly into Nvidia's market share. Trade disputes could see sales volumes fall. With a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 46, just a few things like that going wrong could mean today's Nvidia stock price ends up looking like a value trap. On the other hand, think about those first-quarter growth rates. If Nvidia keeps doing as well, let alone better, its earnings could soar. In that case, the prospective P/E ratio based on today's share price could be low and the current share price a long-term bargain. I see multiple possible drivers for such an increase, such as more widespread adoption of AI and Nvidia launching even more advanced proprietary chip designs. So, I reckon the company could turn out to be either a massive bargain at today's price, or a massive value trap. The price does not offer me enough margin of safety for my comfort if the stock is indeed a value trap. So, I will wait for a more attractive valuation before buying. The post Is Nvidia stock a massive bargain — or a massive value trap? appeared first on The Motley Fool UK. More reading 5 Stocks For Trying To Build Wealth After 50 One Top Growth Stock from the Motley Fool C Ruane has no position in any of the shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Burberry Group Plc, Nvidia, and Reckitt Benckiser Group Plc. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. Motley Fool UK 2025


CNBC
33 minutes ago
- CNBC
Self-made millionaire shares the hardest money conversation he and his wife have ever had: 'I'm sweating thinking about it'
Self-made millionaire, author and TV host Ramit Sethi knows a thing or two about money. He's even published books on how to get rich and how couples can manage their finances together. But his own financial journey hasn't been perfect. He recently sat down with his wife, Cassandra, for a special episode of his Money for Couples podcast where they answered some of the same questions he asks couples every week in an interview with friend Julie Nguyen. The Sethis have been married since 2018, and Ramit has often shared tidbits about their relationship on his podcast and in his books, highlighting some of the strategies they've used to navigate combining finances, earning different incomes, creating shared goals and more. On the podcast, Ramit and Cassandra agreed on the most difficult money conversation they've ever had as a couple: negotiating their prenup before getting married. "I'm sweating thinking about it right now," Ramit said. "[The] first time I brought it up, I remember I had talked to so many people, gotten advice, planned what I was gonna say and I was very nervous about it." Cassandra received the idea of a prenup well, he said, but things went south from there. Many money experts recommend getting a prenuptial agreement, even to those with modest finances. A prenup is a legal contract outlining how a couple wants their finances handled in the event of a divorce. Without one, couples could wind up leaving those decisions — like who gets certain assets or who pays spousal support — up to a judge. Prenups are for everyone, money expert Suze Orman told CNBC Make It in 2020, and individuals should feel comfortable bringing it up with their partner. "If you cannot talk money to the person that you are about to marry, you are doomed for failure because money is going to run through your relationship more than anything else," she said. When Ramit brought up the idea of a prenup up to Cassandra, he had already started his business and written his first book on money. Cassandra didn't know much about them, but was willing to learn. And while they both agreed to get a prenup, their negotiations turned contentious due to differing expectations and understandings of money. Ramit saw the negotiations as strictly financial and tried to let the numbers speak for themselves. Cassandra, on the other hand, was more tapped into the emotional considerations, which Ramit wasn't really thinking about. Ramit tried to make a "generous" offer in his prenup proposal, he said, but Cassandra was more concerned with their relationship and ensuring their feelings and emotions were aligned. "We started going back and forth and I was very confused, very hurt because I'm like, 'I'm not trying to trick anybody here,'" Ramit said. Cassandra eventually suggested the couple sit down with a therapist and talk through their emotions to figure out where things weren't aligning. The therapist asked how they each view money. "That really opened up conversations that we hadn't been able to have because my answer was like, 'growth, of course, look at the compounding.' And her answer was, 'safety,'" Ramit said. Despite the turmoil, the process helped the couple deepen their relationship by revealing not just how they each think about money, but also how they should be communicating those feelings with each other, they said. While Ramit was more focused on the actual numbers, Cassandra didn't have the financial knowledge to get a sense of security from the amounts in their savings and investment accounts. "I'll never forget something Ramit said to me during that time. You were like, 'I really need you to get better at money,'" she said. "I took that very seriously because deep down inside I was like, 'I know I'm not that great at money. I could get better.'" While she worked on learning about prenups and managing money in general, Ramit acknowledged he needed to improve at talking about emotions so he could more clearly communicate where he was coming from and better understand Cassandra's perspective. "In retrospect, you were not asking me to pull out a f------ spreadsheet. You were feeling this," he said. "Looking back, I needed to listen to what you were saying. I should have been asking more questions." Now seven years into their marriage, they still consider what they learned from their prenup negotiations the most valuable lessons they've learned from each other, they said. Cassandra said Ramit's mindset around abundance and trusting your earning power "has been really eye-opening." And Ramit is grateful to have learned from Cassandra the importance of checking in on your feelings and talking about them. "It has really changed the way that I relate to people a lot," he said.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Corporate Cash Levels Are Starting to Fall
(Bloomberg) -- The latest earnings period brought what might be an early warning sign about credit quality for high-grade US companies. Next Stop: Rancho Cucamonga! Where Public Transit Systems Are Bouncing Back Around the World ICE Moves to DNA-Test Families Targeted for Deportation with New Contract US Housing Agency Vulnerable to Fraud After DOGE Cuts, Documents Warn Trump Said He Fired the National Portrait Gallery Director. She's Still There. Cash levels at blue-chip companies are shrinking, when excluding results from the most-cash-rich corporations. Among members of the S&P 500 that have posted results, cash levels for the latest quarter fell nearly 1% compared with the last three months of 2024. That's according to a Bloomberg News analysis that focuses on non-financial companies with less than $30 billion of cash. The group's cash holdings, now at $1.14 trillion, have broadly been declining since the third quarter of 2023, when they peaked at $1.21 trillion. While companies are still generally performing well, shrinking cash levels can be a sign of business slowing and profits falling. That's a particular concern now as escalating trade wars potentially boost the cost of foreign inputs, weigh on profits, and increase inflation. Bond prices for many US companies leave little room for error. Spreads, or risk premiums, on US high-grade corporate debt averaged just 0.85 percentage point on Friday, the tightest level since March. The average level for the last two decades is closer to 1.5 percentage point. 'It's actually a dangerous position to be in,' said Michael Contopoulos, deputy chief investment officer at Richard Bernstein Advisors. 'If you bring down cash balances and you find yourself having to deal with higher inflation and higher volatility, your debt is going to get punished.' For the biggest cash generators, the story is different. Giants from Meta Platforms Inc. to Microsoft Corp. and Nvidia Corp. generally posted strong earnings this quarter. The top 12 biggest holders of cash saw their holdings rise about 1.4%, to around $756.7 billion. The dozen companies, which also include companies outside of the technology industry like Johnson & Johnson, each have more than $30 billion of cash and marketable securities on their books, and hold in total about 40% of the S&P 500's cash. The biggest companies can distort averages, and by some measures many high-grade companies aren't looking great. Leverage levels, for example, have been better about 80% of the time over the last two decades, a UBS Group AG analysis found. But by other measures companies are still performing well. Investment-grade firms are holding more cash as a share of their assets than they have on average over the past decade, according to data from S&P that analyzed North American companies. It's likely the behavior that has contributed to the declines in cash — such as boosting share buybacks — has reversed this quarter as companies prepare for a slowdown, Bank of America credit strategist Yuri Seliger said. That's why some money managers are stopping short of saying that it's time to prepare for the worst. 'You still want to be positioned in companies that have the ability to weather a range of scenarios, but at the same time, I don't think you want to price your entire portfolio to the worst possible outcome,' said Maulik Bhansali, senior portfolio manager at Allspring Global Investments. If any credit weakness were to hit, it would likely start with smaller companies, and in leveraged finance or even private credit, said Matthew Mish, UBS' head of credit strategy. A close look does show some signs of weakness, at least in the smaller firms. Corporate profits for domestic, non-financial companies declined by about 3% in the first quarter compared to the previous period, Bureau of Economic Analysis data shows. 'The large liquid megacaps have certainly outperformed,' Mish said. 'Under the hood, there certainly is a little bit more weakness.' Week In Review Elon Musk is selling $5 billion of debt to help fund his artificial intelligence startup xAI Corp., the latest in a series of fundraising efforts across his business empire as the billionaire pivots away from politics and returns to running his companies. As part of that bond and loan sale, xAI opened its books to investors, showing the company generated about $52 million of gross revenue in the first quarter, and lost $341 million before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization. The sale may be complicated by a very public feud between Trump and Musk. Hong Kong developer New World Development Co. is sliding deeper into distress after its recent decision to delay interest payments on some bonds, marking the latest flashpoint in a years-long crisis in China's property market. Hedge fund founder George Weiss filed personal bankruptcy months after a federal judge ruled he's liable for more than $100 million in debt his eponymous firm owes Jefferies Financial Group Inc. JPMorgan Chase & Co. is sounding out investors for an almost $2 billion loan for Trucordia, the latest instance of a Wall Street bank refinancing debt that insurers initially secured from private credit firms. A group of Wall Street banks, led by Jefferies Financial Group Inc. and UBS Group AG, have started pre-marketing more than $1 billion of debt to fund Bain Capital's acquisition of restaurant chain operator Sizzling Platter. Owens & Minor, a distributor of medical supplies, canceled its planned purchase of Rotech Healthcare Holdings, sending its bonds on a wild ride. Notes it sold in April, with a 10% coupon and due 2030, dropped, because they can be redeemed at par and had been trading above face value. Many other securities the company had sold rallied. Banks and private credit funds are competing with each other to provide as much as €2.5 billion ($2.9 billion) of debt to insurance broker Diot-Siaci Group. Clearlake Capital-backed Wellness Pet Company snagged fresh financing and completed the first step of a debt deal that involves creditors taking a reduction in the value of the original amount they lent. German autoparts maker ZF Friedrichshafen AG pulled in more than €4.5 billion ($4.6 billion) in orders for a new bond sale, signaling strong investor support for shoring up its finances during a rocky stretch for the sector. Delta Air Lines Inc. sold $2 billion of investment-grade bonds Thursday to help repay a government loan it took out during the pandemic to pay employees. A $2.15 billion leveraged loan has been launched to help fund the planned acquisition of Colonial Enterprises Inc. Bankrupt genetic analysis company 23andMe will hold a second auction for its cache of DNA data with an opening bid of $305 million from a group led by the company's former chief executive officer, Anne Wojcicki. A subsidiary of Sunnova Energy International Inc. filed for bankruptcy in Texas as its parent struggled to convince creditors to give it funding to turn around its business in an out-of-court process. EchoStar Corp., the wireless and pay-TV operator controlled by billionaire Charlie Ergen, has decided to skip interest payments on three bonds after skipping another late last week. On the Move MUFG Securities Americas Inc. has hired two longtime leveraged loan bankers — Adam Hoffman and Roger Gilbert — as it continues to grow that business. Hoffman joins as head of loan trading while Gilbert will serve as head of loan sales. Both previously worked at Macquarie Group Ltd., which shuttered its US debt capital markets arm earlier this year to focus on private credit. Lane42 Investment Partners founder Scott Graves is building out his senior leadership team, hiring former CVC Capital Partners and Oaktree Capital Management employees to add to the asset manager he founded earlier this year. London-based hedge fund Redhedge Asset Management LLP has hired two portfolio managers amid growing US investor interest for European credit. Won Choi joined from Maven Investment Partners to oversee credit opportunities and special situations. Nick Campregher, formerly at ExodusPoint Capital Management, started last month and is focusing on financials. Before moving to the asset management industry, he had spent about a decade at UBS Group AG as a trader and risk manager. --With assistance from Tom Contiliano. Cavs Owner Dan Gilbert Wants to Donate His Billions—and Walk Again The SEC Pinned Its Hack on a Few Hapless Day Traders. The Full Story Is Far More Troubling Is Elon Musk's Political Capital Spent? What Does Musk-Trump Split Mean for a 'Big, Beautiful Bill'? Cuts to US Aid Imperil the World's Largest HIV Treatment Program ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data