A Safe Dividend And A Yield Trap

 | Jul 08, 2021 05:17AM ET

Imagine two closed-end funds (CEFs) that both yield upwards of 7%. Sounds great, right? Buy a bit of both and get $58.33 per month for every $10,000 you invest. Put in $500K and you’ve got a middle-class income dropping into your account without you having to do a thing.

While that’s a great way to achieve financial independence, we CEF investors know it’s not as easy as searching out a couple of 7% yielders and buying them. We need to go deeper.

While there are over a hundred CEFs yielding 7% or more right now, their quality varies widely. Some are yield traps that will drain your capital with lousy price performance over time, more than offsetting any dividend cash they pay you.

So how do we tell the strong CEFs from the pretenders?

That, of course, is the question that drives all of our CEF buys, so let’s tackle it by taking two seemingly promising CEFs and looking at what makes them tick: the Eaton Vance) Tax-Managed Diversified Equity Income Fund (NYSE:ETY), holder of a basket of large cap US stocks, and the Gabelli Utility Closed Fund (NYSE:GUT), which, as the name suggests, owns mainly US-based utilities, such as NextEra Energy (NYSE:NEE), WEC Energy (NYSE:WEC)and Duke Energy (NYSE:DUK). In other words, GUT is the kind of fund you’d hold both for stability and the higher dividends utilities provide.

Both funds yield a bit over 7%, with GUT yielding an impressive 7.6%.

h2 Dividend History Should Be Your First Stop/h2

What’s happened with a fund’s payout in the past is a good thing to look at first, because once a fund cuts its dividend once, it’s more likely to do so again.

h2 GUT Holds the Steadier Payout