Altria Group (NYSE:MO) and British American Tobacco Industries (LON:BATS) are two stocks that will hold up well in the declining market.

Altria Group is trading at $51.09. This is after declining 6.24% last week and a further 3.68% this week. At the price, Altria Group has a PEG ratio of 2.75 and a forward PE of 10.98. The price could be discounted further to $44 as the company battles bear pressures.


Are you looking for fast-news, hot-tips and market analysis?

Sign-up for the Invezz newsletter, today.

Altria Group has a dividend per share of $3.60, translating to a dividend yield of 6.77%. The company pays dividends faithfully each quarter. The cash dividend has been growing over the last ten years. Indeed, the stock is an attractive dividend investment.  

British American Tobacco is trading at $42.85. Last week, the stock gained 2.94%, rising further by 1.16%. The price to earnings is 9.33, with PEG at 1.05. The DPS is $2.70 with a dividend yield of 6.33%. While BTI has been paying dividends every quarter, the payout declined over the years. The trend is however showing potential for reversal.

Altria Group trails British American Tobacco

Source – TradingView

Altria Group trails British American Tobacco on price performance. While Altria Group is at a loss position of 17% since 2019, British American Tobacco lost only 1.04%. The performance shows that British American Tobacco offers better value preservation in a declining market.

Summary

British American Tobacco is a better buy. It offers a high dividend yield of 6.33%. Price performance is also more stable in a declining market compared to Altria Group.

Where to buy right now

To invest simply and easily, users need a low-fee broker with a track record of reliability. The following brokers are highly rated, recognised worldwide, and safe to use:

  1. Etoro, trusted by over 13m users worldwide. Register here >
  2. Capital.com, simple, easy to use and regulated. Register here >

*Cryptoasset investing is unregulated in some EU countries and the UK. No consumer protection. Your capital is at risk.

Share:

Leave a Reply