A “Crash-Proof” 7.5% Dividend To Buy For The Second Wave

 | Jul 30, 2020 05:04AM ET

Stocks have (shockingly) broken into the green for 2020 … but few folks are celebrating. That’s understandable: coronavirus cases are surging and another wave of lockdowns is a real possibility.

But there is good news here.

First off, I’ve found a “heads-you-win, tails-you-win” fund that’s perfect for these times. It pays a 7.5% dividend and boasts a portfolio of stocks we know well: Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) and Mastercard (NYSE:MA) among them.

Before we get to this fund, we need to take a close look at this levitating market so we can see exactly what it means for our portfolios as we move into the unpredictable back half of 2020.

h2 Earnings Suggest Another Pullback, But …/h2

So far, companies that have reported second-quarter earnings have seen a roughly 40% decline, the worst drop since the end of 2008. And stock prices are supposed to be connected to earnings, so should we expect a 40% drop in stocks, too?

To answer that, let’s look back to another crisis year: 2008. The biggest, and most obvious, difference between the crises is that today we’re in a forced slowdown of economies to stave off the spread of a virus, while in 2008, a bubble burst after years of assets being overvalued.

In other words, this is a difference between stocks and flows. In 2008, the stock of financial capital (subprime mortgages, mortgage-backed securities, bank balance sheets, real-estate-developer stocks) was thought to be worth more than it really was, so the bubble sharply reduced the value of these assets.

In 2020, the flow of cash from economic activity has been disrupted. The potential to create that economic activity is still there and has retained most of its value. We just can’t use it to its fullest capacity.

Of course, stocks influence flow, and flow influences stocks. When the bubble burst in 2008, a lot of people lost their jobs, which ended up hitting the flow of cash from economic activity. Similarly, the loss of cash flow in 2020 means people are buying less stuff, which ultimately will affect the market value of the companies that produce that stuff.

But so far, the S&P 500 is not lowering the value of companies; it’s assuming that consumption will revert to pre-crisis levels sooner rather than later. That’s the assumption we need to test.

h2 … There Are Signs of Life in This Economy/h2

To determine whether we’re heading back toward a more normal economy, we need to look at consumer confidence. The best way to do that is to focus on how people are really spending their money.

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