2 Top Dividend Funds (8%+ Yields!) To Buy Now

 | Aug 20, 2018 06:30AM ET

Pity the poor landlord, stuck with a boatload of hassles: late rent payments, missed payments, tenants who disappear, tenants who trash the place before they leave.

The list of risks with owning rental property goes on and on! All just to (hopefully) collect a rent check at the end of the month.

But there’s a much easier way to rake in steady income from real estate without the hassle of dealing with tenants and other risks of owning property outright.

The best part?

You’ll get an 8% return on your money in cash every single year. And we’re going to do it straight from our brokerage accounts, just as if we’re buying shares of a company like Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL)—but without the pathetic 1.4% dividend Tim Cook’s firm pays.

I’m talking about real estate investment trusts (REITs), companies that own everything from seniors’ homes to warehouses and must—by law—hand out 90% of their earnings as dividends.

That results in dividends that are twice as high, on average, as those of your typical S&P 500 stock—so around 3.5% on average. (My colleague Brett Owens recently named 3 high-yield REITs set to rise with interest rates. Click here to read that article .)

Your Own REIT “Dividend Magnifier”

Of course, buying REITs on their own is a great way to boost your income stream.

But what few folks know is there’s a simple trick that doubles your REIT dividends (and more): buying REITs through closed-end funds (CEF) , a special group of funds that also trades on the stock market and regularly pays 8%+ yields.

And two of these 8%-paying funds are on sale right now (including one that’s so small and off the radar that Wall Street has ignored it—for now—giving us a one-time opportunity to buy cheap).

Before I get to those, though, let’s talk for just a second about how REITs work.

REITs 101

In a nutshell, REITs pool cash from investors and use it to buy a bunch of properties, which they then rent out to tenants. REITs have a board of directors that manages those properties, takes care of cash flow and pays out dividends to shareholders.

It’s a simple enough business model, and it works very well. In fact, it works better than betting on the broader market over the long haul.

Just compare the SPDR Dow Jones REIT ETF (NYSE:RWR), an index fund that owns the largest US REITs, and the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (NYSE:SPY) over the last couple decades:

REITs a Clear Winner