3 “Perfect For 2022” Dividends Paying 8.2% (And Selling For 20% Off)

 | Dec 13, 2021 04:19AM ET

I shudder when folks tell me their portfolios can’t give them a decent income stream. Because I know there’s an easy way for them to get safe 8%+ payouts—and everyone misses it.

Let’s be honest. When it comes to investing, most people limit themselves to the blue chip stocks of the S&P 500. The problem? These stocks pay a miserly 1.2% average yield. So you’re getting a measly $1,200 in yearly dividend income for every $100K invested!

No one is retiring on that—unless they have a couple million bucks lying around.

But there is another way. It’s a potent income generator I’ve been specializing in for more than a decade—and sharing with investors through my CEF Insider service.

The hint is right in the service’s title: CEFs, or closed-end funds. They’re a collection of 500 income investments that yield an outsized 7% on average, or nearly six times what the typical S&P 500 stock pays.

That makes them the antidote to the record-low dividends offered by stocks—and a great way to counter inflation’s drain on your income stream, too.

I’ve collected three specific funds that would make savvy additions to any portfolio as we head into 2022. They yield even more than the CEF average, paying an outsized 8.2% between them. And they’re also sporting ridiculous discounts to their true value—22% off in one case!— setting you up for quick price appreciation as those deals disappear.

More on this trio of income plays in a moment. First, let me explain how you can tell if a CEF is trading at an attractive discount. It’s a key indicator you can find on any fund screener.

h2 The Deal On The Discount/h2

Unlike ETFs and mutual funds, CEFs tend to trade at prices different from their portfolio value (which we refer to as the net asset value, or NAV). When they’re priced higher, we say the fund trades at a premium to NAV. And a fund trading for less is priced at a discount to NAV.

This disconnect happens because CEFs can’t issue new shares to new investors, and this causes their market prices to separate from the value of their investments.

Our job? Buy when those discounts get historically wide, then ride along as they snap back to normal, pulling the fund’s market price along with them.

And CEF discounts and premiums can get very extreme: look at the history of the PIMCO High Income Fund (NYSE:PHK).

h2 From Cheap To Expensive And Back Again/h2