A CEF Yielding 10% With Surprising Upside In The Next 12 Months

 | Jul 28, 2022 05:54AM ET

I get a lot of readers asking me when this market will bottom. We don’t know for sure, of course, because market bottoms are only visible in hindsight. But I would say that now is a good time to buy dividend-paying stocks—especially if you use dollar cost averaging (DCA), which you probably used to build your portfolio.

DCA (or buying a fixed amount on a fixed date throughout the year, say) is particularly effective for high-yield CEFs.

That’s because of these funds’ above-average dividends and deep discounts to net asset value (NAV, or the value of the stocks in their portfolios). CEF investors who DCA into CEFs can slowly build their income stream over time, reduce their volatility and naturally grab big dividends and discounts, too.

To see what I mean, consider a CEF like the BlackRock Innovation & Growth Trust (BIGZ), a contrarian’s choice if there ever was one. Buying this fund through DCA starting now gets your first buy in the door at a 10.2% yield and a 17.3% discount to NAV.

That might be a good strategy if you’re hesitant to go all in on BIGZ, which I can understand, given that it holds small-cap tech stocks like Bill.com (NYSE:BILL), which makes back-end software for small to medium-sized businesses; Five9 (NASDAQ:FIVN), which supplies customer-service software; and Axon Enterprise (NASDAQ:AXON), a maker of software for the police and the military.

h2 Diversification, DCA Cover CEF Investors Either Way/h2

No matter if you buy all at once or average in, I continue to believe now is a good time to purchase equity-focused CEFs. And while I see BIGZ as a good choice for a speculative play on an economic rebound, you should always hold a collection of CEFs with a diversified range of assets, such as blue-chip stocks, corporate bonds and real estate investment trusts (REITs).

That way, you’ll be exposed to today’s healthy (and it is healthy!) economy in a number of ways. And if the market does take a tumble, you’ll be well diversified and able to continue collecting your high CEF dividends in peace.

But I do see good signs for the economy and our CEFs, even though things are likely to move in a two-steps-forward, one-step-back manner—highlighting the importance of high dividends (which allow us to get through pullbacks without having to sell) and a DCA approach, which lets us naturally buy more of our CEFs when their prices are low and less when they’re high.

Here are two reasons why I’m optimistic:

h2 Employment Remains Strong/h2

Despite the constant stream of bad news coming from the media, we can take solace in the fact that jobs remain plentiful in America:

h2 Unemployment Sinks to Historic Lows