3 Funds Yielding 10.2% That Could Pay for Your Whole Retirement

 | May 01, 2023 05:12AM ET

With the recent pullback from the market’s high this year, we’ve got a nice second chance to buy some terrific dividend stocks cheap. But don’t waste your time with lame payers like General Mills (NYSE:GIS), with its 2.5% yield. Or the miserly 2.1% you get from a so-called “Dividend Aristocrat” like McDonald’s (MCD).

Even though inflation is trending downward, it’s still at 5%. That’s well ahead of these pathetic blue-chip yields—and with the economy still performing well, it could be a while yet before it slows meaningfully from here.

Bottom line: We just can’t afford to own low payers like these any longer.

We need much more income if we want to achieve the dream scenario: a retirement funded entirely by dividends. That’s the path we’re going down today, with three closed-end funds (CEFs) boasting an outsized average yield of 10.2%.

That gets you an “instant” $85 per month in dividends on every $10K invested. In other words, you’d need just $697,000 to match the $71,000 median household income in America. That’s right, this portfolio replaces not one but two jobs on far less than a million dollars.

A 10.2% yield is also 6 times more than an index fund pays. Income like that is crucial in selloffs like the 2022 disaster because you won’t have to sell into a downturn, unlike folks who hold the typical S&P 500 index funds like the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO).

Instead, these three funds’ dividends have kept investors away from the sell button for years, thanks to their payouts. This, over the long haul, is the real key to passive income’s power.

3 CEF Buys for Instant Diversification and 10%+ Dividends

Of course, diversification is critical, so we want our CEF portfolio to hold the following:

  1. Stocks (for long-term growth)
  2. Bonds (for stable income)
  3. Real estate (for a bit of both)

It’s not easy to cobble together a portfolio that ticks all three of these boxes. And if you invest in real estate through physical property, you’re looking at a lot of work. (If you’ve been a landlord, you know it’s a full-time job.)

But you can hit all three categories and get a big income stream with CEFs (with virtually no work!). Here are three funds that, taken together, do just that.

h2 CEF Pick No. 1: A 10.2%-Yielder With a “Hidden” Discount/h2

Let’s start with the Liberty All-Star Equity Fund (USA), which holds large-cap US companies with strong cash flows and growth potential, like Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), UnitedHealth Group (NYSE:UNH) and Visa (NYSE:V). USA’s managers have also done a nice job of scooping up oversold high-margin firms like Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL), Danaher Corp. (NYSE:DHR) and Adobe (NASDAQ:ADBE).

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The draw here is, of course, the dividend, with USA yielding 10.2%. That dividend comes from payouts on slightly levered stocks in the portfolio, plus returns from management’s timely buys and sells. It’s a strategy that works, with USA posting an outstanding 201% total return in the last decade.

A “Star-Spangled” Dividend Buy for the Long Haul?