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Warren Buffett Will Make Over $1.33 Billion This Year From Investing in These 2 High-Yielding Dividend Stocks

Bram Berkowitz, The Motley Fool

5 min read

In This Article:

  • Warren Buffett's company Berkshire Hathaway owns several stocks with strong dividends.

  • Dividend stocks can be nice to own because they often provide reliable, passive income, even during volatile markets.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Chevron ›

Warren Buffett and his company, Berkshire Hathaway, have never paid a dividend, primarily because Buffett has always believed that he could deploy capital in a more rewarding manner for shareholders. Over six decades, the Oracle of Omaha has proven that thesis. But that doesn't mean Buffett and his team of investors don't like investing in stocks that pay dividends. After all, what's better than knowing that every year, your investments will generate passive income even if their stock doesn't always perform as well as expected? This year, Buffett and Berkshire will collect over $1.3 billion in passive income from their investments in these two stocks.

Buffett and Berkshire have shown a keen interest in U.S. domestic oil and energy producers in recent years, and even though the price of oil per barrel has remained subdued, Buffett clearly believes that oil and gas will continue to be in demand and that prices will eventually rise. This thesis has led Berkshire to purchase over 118.6 million shares of Chevron (NYSE: CVX), which consumed slightly under 6% of Berkshire's portfolio at the end of the first quarter of the year. That also makes Chevron Berkshire's fifth largest equity holding.

Warren Buffett.

Image source: Motley Fool.

Chevron has paid a quarterly dividend of $1.71 per share for the first two quarters of the year and currently pays a roughly 5% dividend yield. Assuming this continues, and assuming Berkshire holds its stake in the company constant, Berkshire will collect close to $811.3 million in dividends from Chevron this year.

The Houston, Texas-based company has a good dividend track record. Chevron increased its quarterly dividend this year by 5%, marking the 38th consecutive year the company has increased its annual dividend. Free cash flow in the first quarter of 2025 came in lower than normal at $1.3 billion, but excluding working capital, which can be volatile for the company quarter to quarter, free cash flow was $3.7 billion, enough to cover the $3 billion in dividends paid in the quarter.

Furthermore, management on the company's first-quarter earnings call said that growth projects underway are expected to generate an additional $10 billion of free cash flow in 2026, assuming oil is at $70 per barrel. Management also said their top priority is growing the dividend, so if oil prices were to plummet and management had to pull back on capital returns, they would decrease share buybacks before the dividend.