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In a Crowded Market, This Stock Looks as Good as Any

We are now in the eighth year of the current bull market, and it is getting as difficult as ever to find undervalued stocks.

Much of the low-hanging fruit has already been picked, meaning investors need to look harder and tread more carefully than they have up to this point.

Even the industrials sector of the market, despite knock-on effects from a weaker energy market, is reaching a saturation point.

Stocks such as Snc-Lavalin Group Inc. (TSX:SNC) and Bombardier, Inc. (TSX:BBD.B), which once promised rewarding returns, now seemed destined languish near current levels.

Snc-Lavalin is trading at all-time highs following a 62% rally in 2016. Yet so far in 2017, the stock has been range-bound in the low $50s without much to suggest shares will be moving higher any time soon.

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Bombardier, meanwhile, has rallied an impressive 142% since the start of 2016, but it?s mostly been flat in 2017, as the company?s financial troubles are not yet firmly in the rear-view mirror.

And while Snc-Lavalin?s dividend yield is low at 1.15%, Bombardier shares do not pay a dividend at all.

The current environment is making it extremely difficult for Canadian investors to find high-quality industrial names to round out their portfolios ? especially for those investors looking to add yield to their returns.

Looking south of the border, there is an opportunity to invest in an industrial behemoth which, while it has found itself on hard times lately, has proven to stand the test of time, and, in addition to that, pays a healthy 3.94% dividend today.

General Electric Company (NYSE:GE) has been around for over 100 years, and with a market capitalization of $210 billion, it stands as one of the largest publicly traded companies in the world.

Over the past five years, GE has undergone one of the biggest corporate restructurings in American history, divesting much of the GE Capital business that got the company into trouble during the 2008-09 Financial Crisis, and it has transformed itself into a leaner, meaner industrial powerhouse.

But the company?s performance has suffered as of late, as energy clients have been forced to hold off on capital spending amid lower oil and gas prices.

One of the key benefits of investing in the shares of GE is that the company?s operations are well diversified, meaning the company is not overly reliant on any one business unit or end market.

The company?s recent performance speaks to this; while profits from GE?s power business were down 37% in 2016, overall profits showed an upward trend throughout the year and into 2017.

And while on the surface, GE?s payout ratio looks risky at 109%, the company?s cash flow from operations is much stronger than what accounting earnings (the measure by which the payout ratio is calculated) would suggest.

With Government of Canada 10-year bonds yielding 1.55%, and 10-year U.S. Treasuries not much better at 2.20%, a 3.94% dividend from a high-quality, blue-chip company like GE looks all that much more attractive.

Add to this that GE shares are trading near 52-week lows and are valued at a price-to-earnings ratio of 14 times, a steep discount to historical averages, and investors looking to add an industrial name to their portfolios may not have to look any further.

Stay Foolish.

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Fool contributor Jason Phillips has no position in any stocks mentioned.

1 Massive Dividend Stock to Buy Today (7.8% Yield!) - The Dividend Giveaway

The Motley Fool Canada's top dividend expert and lead adviser of Dividend Investor Canada, Bryan White, recently released a premium "buy report" on a dividend giant he thinks everyone should own. Not only that - but he's created a must-have, exclusive report that outlines all the alarming traits of dividend stocks that are about to blow up - and how you can avoid them.

For this limited time only, we're not only taking 57% off Dividend Investor Canada, but we're offering you special access to two brand-new reports, free of charge upon signing up. They will outline everything you need to know so you steer clear of dividend burn-outs AND take advantage of the dividend giants in the Canadian market.

While this offer is still available, you can find out how to get a copy of these brand-new reports by simply clicking here.

Fool contributor Jason Phillips has no position in any stocks mentioned.