7 Rules For Banking Dividends (And Significant Gains) In Closed-End Funds

 | Sep 27, 2022 05:03AM ET

Don’t be drawn in by this spiking 2-year Treasury yield. Even at just north of 4%, we’re still not retiring off of it!

Think about it for a second: for a ho-hum 4.2%, you’re locking up your cash for two years. Sure, you’ll get your principal back, but you’re still way behind inflation. And it’s almost certain that stocks will be higher two years out, so you’ll miss out on that gain, too.

I say that because the average bear market lasts about 10 months. This is month nine. We don’t get a free pizza if it ends at the 10-month mark. But even if we get a 2008-style 18-month grind, the recession will still be well in the rear view by the time your 2-year Treasury note matures!

h2 CEFs Double Treasury Yields and Set Us Up for Strong Gains/h2

That’s why we’re going to skip Treasuries and go with closed-end funds (CEFs), which regularly pay 8% or better, instead. That’s the difference between a paltry income of $40,000 on a million-buck nest egg or a terrific $80,000 annually.

And if you’re smart about your CEF purchases, you can even buy these funds at discounts—especially after the drop we’ve seen this year—and snare some nice price upside to boot!

With the markets in flux (to say the least), now is a good time to review the principles of successful CEF investing. They are more nuanced than classic stock picking because we’re analyzing managers, strategies and holdings versus simple business models.

It’s easier, for example, to count on dividends via the number of cellular subscriptions Verizon Communications (NYSE:VZ) has than it is to determine how much interest income theDoubleLine Income Solutions Fund (NYSE:DSL) generates.

h2 1. Be Careful With Price-Only Charts/h2

The PIMCO Dynamic Income Fund (NYSE:PDI) has been a strong performer since its 2012 inception. Its sister fund, the Perpetual Credit Income Trust (ASX:PCI), which was recently absorbed into PDI, was equally great to my Contrarian Income Report subscribers.

Traditional analysts missed the beauty of PCI because they missed the payouts. And with CEFs, the dividends always make the difference.

h2 PCI: A Dividend Double