The IBM logo at the headquarters of IBM Germany in the Highlight Towers in Parkstadt Schwabing in Munich (Bavaria).
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In a time of geopolitical tensions and macro uncertainty, dividend-paying stocks can offer investors some steady portfolio income.
In this regard, recommendations of top Wall Street analysts can help investors pick attractive stocks of companies that generate solid cash flows to support continued dividend payments.
Here are three dividend-paying stocks, highlighted by Wall Street’s top pros, as tracked by TipRanks, a platform that ranks analysts based on their past performance.
Permian Resources
We start this week with Permian Resources (PR), an independent oil and natural gas company with assets in the Permian Basin, with a concentration in the core of the Delaware Basin. At a base dividend of 15 cents per share (an annualized dividend of 60 cents per share), PR stock offers a dividend yield of 4.3%.
In a recent research report, Siebert Williams analyst Gabriele Sorbara reiterated a buy rating on Permian Resources stock with a price forecast of $19, saying, “Extending track record of operational execution with a near-term focus on 4Q25, where the implied oil production guidance midpoint is ~187.4 Mbbls/d on a capex of $484.6 mn.” TipRanks’ AI Analyst also has an “outperform” rating on PR stock with a price target of $16.
Sorbara noted that Permian is sticking to its plan to reward shareholders through a quarterly dividend of 15 cents per share and opportunistic stock buybacks. Notably, the company has a $1 billion buyback authorization with no end date. The five-star analyst expects Permian to raise its dividend next year and beyond.
Meanwhile, Sorbara expects the company to release its 2026 outlook in February once it finalizes a plan that fits the commodity price and service cost backdrop. The analyst expects Permian to benefit from several positives in 2026, including lower drilling costs, an increased production base in the second half of last year, steady operational strength, and better pricing from recent deals. Sorbara expects these tailwinds to drive efficiency in production, capital spending and free cash flow.
Additionally, Sorbara noted Permian’s efforts to further strengthen its balance sheet, aiming for a long term net-debt/EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) target of 0.5x-1.0x. Also, the $500 million to $1 billion of cash on hand gives the company flexibility to execute capital allocation options like acquisitions, buybacks, and debt reduction even at West Texas Intermediate crude prices in the range of $35 to $40/bbl.
Sorbara ranks No. 522 among more than 10,400 analysts tracked by TipRanks. His ratings have been successful 52% of the time, delivering an average return of 15.4%. See Permian Resources Ownership Structure on TipRanks.
International Business Machines
Tech giant IBM (IBM) is this week’s second dividend pick. The company returned $1.6 billion in dividends to shareholders in the third quarter of 2025. With a quarterly dividend of $1.68 per share (annualized dividend of $6.72 per share), IBM offers a yield of 2.2%.
Recently, Jefferies analyst Brent Thill upgraded IBM stock to buy from hold and raised the price target to $360 from $300, citing “a clearer path to software acceleration, improving fundamentals, and valuation not yet fully reflecting the software premium.” TipRanks’ AI Analyst has an “outperform” rating on IBM stock with a price target of $354.
The five-star analyst noted management’s more favorable outlook across key growth areas, with tech transformation and rapid AI adoption fueling broad-based demand. Thill noted that improving regulatory and tax policies, solid organic software growth, synergies from recent mergers and acquisitions and key wins in generative AI consulting are also supporting management’s optimism.
Notably, synergies from the HashiCorp acquisition and the pending Confluent (CFLT) deal are expected to drive accelerated software growth in 2026 compared to just under 10% exiting 2025. Thill also expects IBM to deliver consistently improving margins (estimates pretax margin of 21% in 2027 compared to 19% in 2025), driven by a growing software mix and operational discipline.
With IBM trading at 26x 2027 P/E multiple, compared to the large-cap software peer average of 35x, Thill finds the stock’s valuation attractive and contends that it still has upside as the software reacceleration expectation is not priced in.
Thill ranks No. 539 among more than 10,400 analysts tracked by TipRanks. His ratings have been successful 61% of the time, delivering an average return of 11%. See IBM Statistics on TipRanks.
Kinetik Holdings
Kinetik Holdings (KNTK) is a midstream…
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