As investors reconsider the tolerance of the summer rally, they may find comfort in low-volatility stocks that are generating income. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell more than 600 points Monday, while the S&P 500 lost more than 2%. It was their biggest one-day drop since dropping to a June 16 low. Shares have been falling since mid-June, leading some investors to hope for the worst of the year. This bad may end. Others argue that the recovery is temporary and that the market will inevitably fall back later in the year. However, there are still a handful of stocks that investors can turn to for shelter. Using FactSet data, CNBC Pro screened for names that were higher in the year and had a three-year beta of less than 1, which means they tend to be less volatile than the broader market; have a dividend yield of more than 3%, which means they generate greater income than 10-year Treasury bills; and have a free cash flow yield above 5%, indicating that the company has some financial stability. Here are stocks that meet these criteria: Energy infrastructure company Kinder Morgan and food producer Kellogg posted their highest year-to-date returns in 2022, with both up 17% after Monday’s close. Kinder has a three-year beta of 0.9 and the highest dividend yield and free cash flow. Kellogg has the lowest, but it also has the lowest beta of any name on the list at 0.3. Kraft Heinz and Philip Morris also made the list. Kraft has a strong free cash flow yield of 10.2% and is up 7% this year. Tobacco maker Philip Morris is one of the higher-yielding companies in the group at 5.1%. It is up 3.5% for the year. AbbVie is the only healthcare stock on the list. It grew just over 3% on the year alongside packaging company Amcor. Tech giant IBM is behind on the list in terms of performance so far, up just 1.4%.