Invesco High Yield Equity Dividend Achievers ETF (NYSEARCA:PEY) generates income the straightforward way: by holding dividend-paying stocks. The fund’s 4.95% yield comes from a portfolio concentrated in traditionally stable sectors, with Financials and Utilities combining for 41% of assets—sectors known for consistent cash generation and regular payouts.
The key question for income investors: can these companies sustain their payouts?
Top Holdings Face Mixed Dividend Pressure
PEY’s largest position, Perrigo (NYSE:PRGO | PRGO Price Prediction) at 3.75%, presents the fund’s most significant risk. The company is paying out more than it earns—a red flag for dividend sustainability. The root cause is deteriorating business performance across both revenue and profitability, creating pressure on the dividend that won’t ease without operational improvement.
The second-largest holding, LyondellBasell (NYSE:LYB) at 3.62%, tells a more stable story. The petrochemical company has steadily increased its dividend, most recently raising the payout in 2025. While materials sector exposure brings cyclical risk, LyondellBasell has maintained payment discipline through multiple business cycles, avoiding cuts for five consecutive years.
United Parcel Service (NYSE:UPS), the sixth-largest holding at 2.97%, shows warning signs. UPS is stretching to maintain its dividend, with payouts now exceeding current earnings. The logistics giant faces headwinds as its business contracts, though its strong return on equity provides some financial cushion. The question is whether operational challenges prove temporary or signal a longer-term shift in the shipping industry.
Pfizer (NYSE:PFE) at 2.59% demonstrates healthier fundamentals. The pharmaceutical giant has normalized earnings following its COVID-era peak, and importantly has beaten earnings estimates consistently throughout 2024-2025. This track record of outperformance suggests conservative guidance and operational strength—positive signals for dividend coverage.
Total Return Matters
PEY returned 3.2% over the past year and 49% over five years. While the 4.95% yield provides income, investors should recognize that several top holdings face earnings pressure that could threaten distributions. The fund’s diversification across 50+ positions limits single-company risk, but concentration in challenged names like Perrigo and UPS warrants attention.