6 Large-Cap Undervalued Stocks with High Dividend Yields

We have been urging investors to focus on high dividend stocks for the past year. The problem is, most people don't know how to time the market. Dividend-yielding stocks are valued like any other stocks, and, like other investments, when they are undervalued is the best time to buy. We used price-to-book and price-to-earnings ratios to pick the most undervalued stocks. Here is a list of high-dividend yielding stocks (at least 7% dividend yield) that have P/B ratios less than 1.2 and forward P/E ratios of 10 or less. Most of these stocks are foreign stocks which shouldn't be very surprising. We think the crisis in Europe is overblown and both European banks and telecom stocks are undervalued right now. We know that most dividend investors are conservative investors but we believe this is a great time to at least initiate a small diversified position in the European stocks that nobody wants to own. 1. France Telecom FTE is a mobile operator which provides internet access and telecommunications services in Europe. The company has a market cap of nearly $40 billion. The stock offers a dividend yield of 13%. It's currently trading with a forward P/E of 8.35 and a P/B ratio of 1.1. FTE lost 17% last year. France Telecom isn't a popular stock among the 350+ hedge funds we are tracking. The only hedge fund with a position in FTE was Two Sigma Advisers. 2. Annaly Capital Management, Inc. NLY manages a range of real estate related investments. The company has a market cap of $16 billion, a dividend yield of 13.8%, a forward P/E of 7.22, and a P/B of 1.01. NLY returned in line with the market during 2011, returning 2.5%. Many hedge funds were buying NLY last year. Bill Miller's Legg Mason Capital Management had more than 7 million shares of NLY during Q3. Some famous hedge fund managers also invested in NLY include D. E. Shaw and Cliff Asness. 3. Banco Santander, S.A. STD offers a range of financial products to European countries, Latin American countries and the United States. It has a market cap of $66 billion and a dividend yield of 11.12%. It trades with a forward P/E of 4.83 and a P/B of 0.63. The stock lost 23% in 2011. Ken Fisher was a huge fan of STD last year; he had nearly 29 million shares of STD at the end of September. Jim Simons and Bruce Berkowitz picked STD during the third quarter, each initiating a new position. 4. Telefonica, S.A. TEF is a $79 billion market cap company that provides telecom services in Spain, the rest of Europe and Latin America. It offers a 7.67 forward PE ratio, a P/B ratio of 1.13, and a dividend yield of 12.22%. The stock lost 17% last year. Jim Simons' Renaissance Technologies is a fan of TEF. The fund had over $46 million in the company at the end of September after increasing its position by 373% in the third quarter. 5. Telecom Italia S.P.A. TI is a company based in Italy that operates in the telecommunications sector. It lost 12% in 2011. The stock has a market cap of $18.3B, offers a dividend yield of nearly 8%, is priced at a forward P/E of 6.33, and has a P/B ratio of 0.62. Jim Simons was a fan of TI last year. Steven Cohen and Israel Englander also had very small positions in Telecom Italia. 6. VimpelCom Ltd. VIP is a group of integrated telecommunications services operators. VIP has a dividend yield of 7.68%. It also has a forward P/E ratio of 7.74 and a P/B ratio of 1.09. It has a market cap of $13.4 billion and lost 33% during the past year. D. E. Shaw had 1.37 million shares of VIP in his portfolio, according to Q3 filings. Louis Bacon Moore sold his fund's $13 million position during the third quarter.
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