3 Funds That Crush ETFs and Pay 8.4%+

 | Apr 28, 2020 05:24AM ET

The convenience of a one-click ETF is tempting, but in times like these, buying one can seriously cap your upside—and cause you to leave serious dividend cash on the table, too.

I know that’s a controversial statement, with the millions of ETF fanboys and fangals out there, so let me explain why you do not want to pile into these vehicles during a bear market like this one.

I’ll start with a very popular ETF, the Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (NYSE:VYM). True to its name, it holds the stocks that pop into most people’s minds when they think about dividends, like Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ), Procter & Gamble (PG), Verizon Communications (NYSE:VZ) and Pfizer (NYSE:PFE).

Trouble is, these so-called “high-dividend-yield” stocks don’t pay high dividends at all! As I write, VYM yields 3.6%. That’s well above the S&P 500 average of around 2%, but it’s still ho-hum in 2020, when a double-digit drop in the market has increased the yields on many individual stocks to far higher levels.

Just by “cherry-picking” everyday stocks, for example, you can grab a growing 8.2% dividend, like the one paid by 145-year-old insurer Prudential (LON:PRU). Buying AT&T (NYSE:T), another dividend go-to, will get you an easy 7.1% payout.

Cheap Fees, Lame Returns

When it comes to upside, VYM is also at a disadvantage because it’s tied to the FTSE High Dividend Yield Index, which includes the highest-yielding US companies, save for REITs. The fact that VYM is glued to that index means you’ll pay a pittance in fees, just 0.06% of assets.

Unfortunately, you’ll get what you pay for. With no human manager to steer around the many landmines in the high-yield universe, VYM has been crushed in the last year, including in this crisis—even with its so-called high dividends included!

“High Yield” ETF Lags