3 Ways To Cash In On Rising Rates (And Collect 7.4% Dividends)

 | Sep 13, 2018 06:17AM ET

It’s a question I get from investors all the time (including subscribers to service ): how should I invest when interest rates rise?

Because fear of rising rates is common among investors, there’s a hidden trap here: if you react to this worry, you will lose money. Instead, you need a second-level understanding of rates so you can bet against this fear and make money. (I’ll also give you 3 great buys that let you quickly and easily pull this off below.)

What Most People Get Wrong About Rising Rates

Here’s the common thinking on rates: as they head up, rising yields on US Treasuries will make these investments more attractive than large-cap US dividend stocks. At the same time, corporate borrowing costs will rise, handcuffing American companies’ profit growth. Higher rates will also drive up the dollar, causing foreign stocks to fall. In short, rising rates are bad news for pretty much all stocks.

This paragraph has a grain of truth to it, but it’s also misleading.

Because higher rates might in theory attract capital from dividend stocks, and they do boost corporate borrowing costs. But just focusing on these two angles ignores why rates are rising in the first place: inflation is getting stronger and economic growth is strengthening. These are both bullish signs for stocks—and they’re much more important to stock fundamentals than interest rates.

That’s why both large-cap dividend stocks (which make up the iShares Select Dividend (NASDAQ:DVY)) and the tech stocks in the Invesco QQQ Trust Series 1 (NASDAQ:QQQ) are up solidly over the last three years, since the Federal Reserve kicked off the current rising-rate cycle:

Rates Rise, Stocks Rise