2 Magnificent Dividend Stocks Down 33% and 39% to Buy Right Now While Their Dividend Yields Are Near Once-in-a-Decade Highs

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One of my favorite pairings when looking for passive income on the stock market is to find companies with safe, steady operations with dividend yields that are near 10-year highs. While finding this combination isn't exactly common, chocolatier The Hershey Company (NYSE: HSY) and quick-service food franchisor MTY Food Group (OTC: MTYF.F) currently meet these requirements.

With Hershey and MTY down 12% and 20% from their 52-week highs -- and 33% and 39% below their all-time highs -- investors would be wise to consider these two magnificent dividend stocks at discounted prices.

Here's why buying Hershey and MTY makes for a compelling investment proposition, with their 2.9% and 2.3% dividend yields near a decade-long high.

Hershey: Safety and stability in chocolates and snacks

Perhaps the most persuasive reason to consider buying The Hershey Company is its stability. Operating in the recession-resistant industries of chocolates and sweet and salty snacks, Hershey is undeniably steady, as evidenced by its 0.37 five-year beta.

Beta measures a stock's volatility compared to the broader market, and a beta below 1 implies that a stock is less likely to plunge during bear markets. Stocks with a beta as low as Hershey's are what I would consider "bedrock" types of holdings that you can use as a foundational piece in any of your portfolios -- which is why it is one of my daughter's nine core portfolio positions.

With that said, the company's current 33% drawdown from its all-time high is its third-largest of the last three decades, only smaller than its 50% and 40% drops during the 2008 and 2000 crashes.

So, does this drop show that Hershey is damaged goods since the broader market is still up?

Not so much. First, prior to this decline, the company's ratio of enterprise value (EV) to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) was at an all-time high of 24. For perspective, Hershey's current EV/EBITDA ratio is 15, and its historical average as a publicly traded stock is 18, which shows just how stretched its valuation had become.

HSY EV to EBITDA Chart
HSY EV to EBITDA Chart

Furthermore, the company is facing an array of short-term headwinds ranging from implementing a new enterprise resource planning system, cocoa prices briefly quadrupling in less than two years, and a cost-conscious consumer. Ultimately, however, when investors look back at these challenges 10 years from now, I'm confident that they will have proven to be temporary and that Hershey's market-leading brands will have endured.