These Boring Blue Chips Can Generate $48,000 a Year on $800K

Photo of Drew Wood
By Drew Wood Updated Published
This post may contain links from our sponsors and affiliates, and Flywheel Publishing may receive compensation for actions taken through them.
These Boring Blue Chips Can Generate $48,000 a Year on $800K

© Aged clerk yawns, covering his mouth ineffectively. The close-up reveals a man tired, perhaps bored, needing oxygen or hinting at a transition. Dressed as a senior businessman in shirt and tie (Shutterstock.com) by Giulio_Fornasar

Generating $48,000 a year from a portfolio requires capital proportional to your yield target. A 3.5% yield requires $1.37 million; a 7% yield requires $800,000 to produce the same annual income.

The four stocks in this article, Verizon Communications (NYSE:VZ | VZ Price Prediction), Altria Group (NYSE:MO), British American Tobacco (NYSE:BTI), and Energy Transfer LP (NYSE:ET), are cash machines yielding in the moderate-to-high range where the $800,000 / $48,000 math lives.

The Conservative Tier: Safety at a Cost

Broad dividend growth stocks and investment-grade bond funds typically yield 3% to 4%. To generate $48,000 annually at 3.5%, you need roughly $1,370,000. At 4%, you need $1,200,000.

This tier offers diversification across hundreds of companies, dividend growth over time, and principal appreciation. The income stream is durable. A 30-year retirement plan is most likely to end with more money than it started with.

The 10-year Treasury currently yields around 4.29%, barely above the risk-free rate. That gap matters when deciding whether equity risk is worth taking at this yield level.

The $800K Zone: Where These Four Stocks Live

The moderate tier, roughly 5% to 7%, is where $48,000 divided by 0.06 equals exactly $800,000. At 7%, required capital drops to roughly $686,000.

All four stocks yield in this range. Verizon’s annualized dividend of $2.74 per share against a current price near $46 implies a yield just under 6%. Altria pays $1.06 per quarter, annualizing to $4.24, against a share price near $67, producing a yield just over 6%. BTI pays $0.83 per quarter in 2026, putting its yield near 5.7% at current prices around $58. Energy Transfer distributes $0.34 per quarter, annualizing to $1.34, and at roughly $19 per unit, that is close to 7%.

The tradeoff is real. Altria’s cigarette volumes decline roughly 10% annually, so dividend growth depends on pricing power and its NJOY acquisition. Verizon carries $144 billion in total debt, with wireless service revenue growth guidance of 2% to 2.8%. Energy Transfer’s interest expense ran $910 million in a single quarter. These are the costs of the yield premium over Treasuries.

What these names offer is income consistency. Altria has raised its dividend 60 times in 56 years. Energy Transfer has increased its quarterly distribution every quarter since early 2024, from $0.3175 to $0.335. Verizon has delivered 18 consecutive quarters of wireless service revenue growth.

The High-Yield Trap: When Yields Signal Danger

At 10% to 12% yield, $48,000 requires only $480,000 to $400,000 in capital. That sounds compelling until you understand what generates those yields: leveraged covered call funds, mortgage REITs, business development companies, and high-yield bond funds. These structures often distribute more than they earn, funding payouts by returning capital or taking on leverage.

Many investors in this tier spend down principal without realizing it, receiving income checks while their account balance quietly shrinks.

The Compounding Advantage of Lower Yields

A 6% yield that grows 5% annually produces far more income a decade from now than a 10% yield that stays flat. Altria has guided for mid-single digit annual dividend growth through 2028. That means the $48,000 you generate today could become $60,000 or more in ten years from the same capital.

A 10% yield with no growth stays at $48,000 in year ten. The conservative portfolio wins on total income over time. The aggressive portfolio wins only if you need maximum cash today.

Before You Build This Portfolio, Check These Three Things

  1. Calculate your actual annual spending, not your income target. Many retirees discover they need $38,000 or $42,000, not $48,000, because taxes and work-related costs disappear. A lower target improves every tier’s math.
  2. Model the tax treatment of each income type. Qualified dividends from Verizon and Altria are taxed at capital gains rates. Energy Transfer distributions involve a K-1 and can create state tax complications. BTI dividends as a foreign ADR may be subject to withholding taxes. The after-tax yield is what lands in your account.
  3. Compare the 10-year total return of a 6% dividend growth position against a 10% high-yield fund. Compounding on reinvested dividends combined with principal stability often makes the lower-yielding option the higher-returning one over a full decade.
Photo of Drew Wood
About the Author Drew Wood →

Drew Wood has edited or ghostwritten 9 books and published over 1,400 articles on a wide range of topics, including business, politics, world cultures, wildlife, and earth science. Drew holds a doctorate and 4 masters degrees, and he has nearly 30 years of college teaching experience. His travels have taken him to 25 countries, including 3 years living abroad in Ukraine.

Continue Reading

Top Gaining Stocks

MOS Vol: 14,295,760
STX Vol: 3,198,282
ALB Vol: 3,265,097
INTC Vol: 151,379,140
WDC Vol: 6,291,434

Top Losing Stocks

CTRA Vol: 73,319,495
ADBE Vol: 25,063,608
LEN Vol: 6,260,516
TKO Vol: 1,889,802
SMCI Vol: 85,032,138