8 High-Yield Stocks from the Best-Performing Sector in the Market

Major global stock markets have confounded the skeptics and are off to a strong start in 2013, shrugging off such headline risks as U.S. tax hikes, government spending cuts and a dead-locked general election in Italy, the eurozone’s third-largest economy.

Quick question: What’s the strongest-performing sector so far this year?#-ad_banner-#

If you’re like many investors, then you might have answered technology or financials; after all, these are both groups that tend to perform well amid a strong broader market backdrop. And you’d be partly right — in the United States and Europe, financials have generally outperformed the broader market.

But the sector that’s topping the rest so far this year is one that most investors expect to see outperform in the midst of a weak stock market – health care.

In the United States, the S&P 500 Healthcare Index is up 12% so far in 2013, more than any other sector and significantly better than the roughly 9% jump so far this year in the S&P 500. Within the Bloomberg European 500, the pharmaceuticals index is up 7% compared with a 6% gain in the index as a whole.

Most impressive of all is Japan — the TOPIX Pharmaceuticals Index is up 15% this year in U.S. dollar terms, double the return of the benchmark TOPIX index on the same basis.

There are several possible explanations for the strength in a classically defensive group in the midst of a strong market rally. One is that the global pharmaceutical industry has faced a wave of high-profile patent expirations during the past few years. As these drugs have lost patent protection and become subject to generic competition, the industry lost significant revenue.

But 2012 was the worst year of the so-called “patent cliff.” With fewer expirations on the horizon and more drugs in late-stage trials, the outlook for pharmaceutical stocks has brightened.

Another factor helping the group is investors’ cautiously bullish stance. While stock markets have been performing well, health care isn’t the only defensive group that has outperformed so far this year. In the United States, for example, the S&P 500 Consumer Staples Index — food, beverage and household product stocks — is up 11%, besting the overall S&P 500 by a wide margin.

This suggests that investors want to participate in the global stock market rally but aren’t quite ready to buy into the most cyclical groups.

If that describes you, then you’re in luck. I’ve found eight global pharmaceutical stocks that not only offer international diversification in a defensive industry, but they also carry yields up to 8%. With yields on most traditional income investments — including high-quality bonds and bank savings accounts — near multi-decade lows, it’s no wonder investors are looking for investments offering significant and sustainable dividend yields.

With these points in mind, I scanned my database of stocks looking for non-U.S. health care names with yields more than 3% trading as American depository receipts (ADRs) on U.S. exchanges. To screen out serial underperformers, I excluded any company that hasn’t produced a positive total return in 2013.

Risks to Consider: Any sort of hiccups in the product development pipeline could hurt share prices of these companies, but as I stated earlier, the bulk of the “patent cliff” is in the past now, and these companies have had years to plan ahead. Also, a “risk-on” environment for stocks could cause investors to rotate out of these defensive stocks and into riskier investments.

Action to Take –> French-based pharmaceutical company Sanofi is a member of one of my High-Yield International portfolios. But the rest of the stocks on this list should grab your attention, too. All of them offer above-average yields and could be just the right diversification tool your portfolio needs.