100% Upside, 9% Dividends From Bonds? Here’s How

 | Oct 15, 2020 05:27AM ET

These days, you can be forgiven for thinking a wave of bankruptcies is going to hit your portfolio (and your dividends!). But there’s no need to worry: this so-called “wave” is way overhyped—in fact, it could send your portfolio higher.

It’s just one more upside-down thing we investors have to deal with in this crisis.

And get this: you could line yourself up for triple-digit returns (and 8%+ dividends!) if you tap into investors’ (overwrought) bankruptcy fears through a corporate-bond-focused closed-end fund (CEF). I’ll have a ticker (paying a monthly dividend yielding 9.2%) in a moment.

First, let’s dispel one myth: that COVID-19 is behind all the bankruptcies we’re hearing about these days.

Nonsense.

Of course, in some cases, the pandemic is the problem (with New York City clothing chain Century 21, for example). But for every Century 21 there’s a Modell’s Sporting Goods, which filed for bankruptcy on March 11, too early for COVID-19 to be the reason. The real problem was plummeting sales during the holiday season, in part because Walmart (NYSE:WMT) and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) were proving more popular among convenience-focused shoppers.

Even companies that were right in the virus’s path, like those in the hard-hit travel sector, weren’t all driven into creditor protection just because of the disease. Perhaps the highest-profile bankruptcy was car-rental giant Hertz (NYSE:HTZ). But if the pandemic was the only culprit in Hertz’s demise, why hasn’t Avis (NASDAQ:CAR) also gone bust?

h2 Avis Steers Through COVID. Hertz Hits The Wall/h2