About a month ago, Mike Bird, the Wall Street editor for The Economist, tweeted (or “X-ed,” I guess I should say) the following: “You have to concede that there would be a form of stupid, ridiculous beauty in the S&P 500 closing completely flat for April.”
And, well, after all the drama we saw in April, that’s pretty much where we landed.
A Wild—But in the End, Sideways—April for Stocks
Let’s look at three things that stand out, especially for those of us who aim to invest for high income and a “dividend-driven” retirement.
April Takeaway No. 1: Diversification Works
While stocks have struggled to get into the green this year (and mightily in April!), corporate bonds are up: The benchmark for corporates, the SPDR Bloomberg High-Yield Bond ETF (JNK), has returned a little more than 2% year to date as I write this.
We, of course, prefer to buy bonds through closed-end funds (CEFs), for two reasons:
- Active management: CEFs—especially those with well-connected managers—have a big advantage over ETFs. The bond world is small, and it pays to “know people who know people” to get in on the best new issues.
- Bigger dividends: The bond-fund bucket of the CEF Insider portfolio has funds yielding up to 13.7% as I write this, and …
- Discounts to net asset value (NAV, or the value of the fund’s underlying portfolio), which give us additional upside as they shrink. That’s in addition to gains in the value of the portfolio.
A good example is the PGIM Global High Yield Fund (GHY), which we added to the CEF Insider portfolio in late January. It’s outperformed the S&P 500 since, as of this writing.
GHY Clobbers the S&P 500
It’s a good example of how we can blunt the effect a stock-market crash on our portfolios by investing elsewhere. And of course (and maybe more important!) we diversify our income stream, too. Let’s talk about that next.
April Takeaway No. 2: Dividends Keep Us From “Forced Losses”
GHY, as mentioned, yields 9.7%, or about $80.83 per month per $10,000 invested. That’s a lot more than the $10.25 per month you’d get from an S&P 500 index fund.
The typical index fund’s tiny income stream means that if an investor needed to sell stocks to fund their needs in April, they faced a much higher risk of being forced to do so at a loss. That’s not the case with GHY, with its 9.7% payout. Hence the month was an opportunity for GHY buyers, especially those who bought more when GHY sold off at the start of April.
April Takeaway No. 3: Irrational Investors Give Us an Opportunity
The market also, of course, gets it wrong and overshoots to the downside all the time. That mispricing is something we can pounce on.
Yet again, GHY is an example here. When we added it to the CEF Insider portfolio in January, it was trading at a 3.25% discount to NAV. Now it is trading around par and has moved solidly into premium territory a number of times since our buy.
GHY’s Discount Narrows
— Michael Foster
These 11.6% (Monthly) Dividends Can Save You From Another “April Surprise” [sponsor]
April’s chaos showed the power of high-yield CEFs like GHY. While the S&P whipsawed, holders of top-notch CEFs didn’t worry. No matter how things panned out, they knew they’d get 7%, 8% 10% and more in cash dividends—every single year.
The best part is, many CEFs—GHY among them—pay dividends monthly. That means you not only get “recession-resistant” income, but your payouts drop into your account right in line with your bills!
I’ve uncovered 5 monthly dividend payers yielding 11.6%+ on average, with built-in discounts and “ironclad” portfolios. I want to GIVE you their names now. With these 5 monthly cash machines, you could collect your first payout within weeks—and set yourself up for solid income for life, no matter what markets do.
Source: Contrarian Outlook