A 6.9% Dividend With Crash Insurance? We’ll Take It!

 | Jul 02, 2020 05:54AM ET

Most of us know we need to stay in stocks through this crisis—but some days it’s easier said than done!

Let’s be honest: we could all use a break—a way to hedge against the nasty drops we see when we log into our trading accounts in the morning.

My first suggestion—try not to log into your account every morning! But if you insist on doing so, then my second suggestion is to take a close look at a popular hedging vehicle called a covered-call fund.

h3 Covered-Call Funds: 6%+ Dividend With “Crash Insurance”/h3

Covered-call funds are a kind of closed-end fund (CEF) that holds stocks but gives us an income stream we’d never see from an S&P 500 company—yields of 6% to 10% are the norm among covered-call funds. This both bolsters our dividend income and, if we let this cash accumulate naturally in our portfolios, reduces our volatility, too.

Let’s take just a second to break this down further, then we’ll dive into specific tickers.

A call option is a kind of agreement where one person pays for the right to buy a stock at a fixed price in the future. To do this, these people sign contracts with option sellers. Covered-call funds own stocks, so they’re in a position to sell these kinds of options to investors, generating a nice extra cash stream—and bolstering our dividend payouts—as they do.

There are three major covered-call CEFs on the market, and they hold the stocks in the three major US stock indexes: the Nuveen Dow 30 Dynamic Overwrite Fund (NYSE:DIAX), which holds stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average; the Nuveen S&P 500 Dynamic Overwrite Fund (NYSE:SPXX); and the Nuveen Nasdaq 100 Dynamic Overwrite Fund (NASDAQ:QQQX).

These are all appealing dividend plays at first glance; DIAX’s yield is 8.1%; SPXX yields 7.8%; and QQQX yields 6.9%. But which one should you buy now?

First, let’s look at their pricing.

Two Bargains … or are They?