-
Some stock market sectors significantly impact the S&P 500, whereas others barely make a dent.
-
There are plenty of ways to generate passive income across market sectors.
-
Investing in companies with very little overlap can help reduce correlation.
The Global Industry Classification Standard assigns each stock into a market sector to make it easier for investors to compare companies to their peers and track broader market movements.
The system isn't perfect. For example, Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) is in the consumer discretionary sector even though its cloud arm, Amazon Web Services, is its most valuable segment — meaning Amazon is arguably more of a technology company. But overall, the system is useful for achieving portfolio diversification and seeing which sectors are outperforming or underperforming the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC).
Here are the 11 stocks I would choose if I could only buy one dividend stock from each sector for the rest of the year.
The technology sector makes up just over a third of the S&P 500 with a 34% weighting. The tech sector includes the three largest companies in the world — Nvidia, Microsoft, and Apple. My top tech stock for the rest of 2025 is Texas Instruments (NASDAQ: TXN).
The company is an industry veteran that makes analog and embedded semiconductors. It's not a pure artificial intelligence (AI) play. But Texas Instruments is unique in that it has a highly diversified business. The company stands to benefit from the growth of edge AI, which involves AI on a device level rather than in the cloud.
With 21 consecutive years of dividend raises and a 2.7% yield, Texas Instruments stands out as a unique way to invest in tech while generating a sizable amount of passive income.
Financials are the second-largest stock market sector with a 13.8% weight in the S&P 500. Payment processors have wide moats, rock-solid business models, and extremely high margins.
American Express (NYSE: AXP) takes it a step further by acting as both a payment processor and a card issuer. Issuing cards adds risk to the business, but American Express has an excellent track record of managing that risk, as evidenced by its low net write-off rate.
The consumer discretionary sector makes up 10.4% of the S&P 500. The sector can be highly cyclical and sensitive to macro data from the broader economy, housing market, interest rates, and more. Starbucks (NASDAQ: SBUX) is my top pick from the sector because the company's turnaround is going well and the dividend is excellent.