5 Ways To Get Up To 14.6% Yield

 | Sep 28, 2020 04:35AM ET

If we can be sure of one thing these days, it’s that millions of investors are fed up with the pathetic 0.7% yields offered by so-called “safe” plays like Treasuries. And the 1.7% dividend that the average S&P 500 stock pays? Nobody’s not retiring on that, either!

So it follows that many more investors will go on the hunt for high, safe dividends in the coming months.

That means a group of 500 big yielders called closed-end funds (CEFs) will draw a lot more interest. The average CEF yields 7.2% now, and the biggest payers yield well into the double digits, like the 14.6%+ yielders we’ll dive into below. Better still, you can buy CEFs on the open market, just like stocks.

But we can’t let those high yields lull us into a false sense of security, because sometimes big yields mask big risks. So, with CEFs, as with any dividend-paying investment, we need to look beyond the current yield to make sure our payouts are safe.

Let’s do that with the five highest-yielding CEFs out there, sorted from highest yield to lowest. Their strengths and weaknesses tell us a lot about what does—and does not—make for a profitable CEF investment.

h2 Cornerstone Strategic Value Fund/h2

Dividend yield: 20.6%

Pros

  • Very high yield
  • Long history

Cons

  • Frequent dividend cuts
  • Underperforming the market
  • Trades at a premium to net asset value (NAV)

CLM, the highest yielding CEF, is a stock-focused fund with some of the biggest names in the S&P 500 among its top-10 holdings, including Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) and Home Depot (NYSE:HD).

So far, so good. But this is where we come up against the first flaw in CLM’s strategy: it focuses on paying out a big chunk of cash to investors, regardless of the performance of its underlying portfolio, which is vital to supporting those payouts.

And since CLM consistently underperforms the market, the result has been many dividend cuts. In fact CLM has lowered its payout every single year since 2009!

h2 CLM Buyers: “How Much Will My Dividend Drop This Year?”/h2