CEF Investors: Doing This Will Jeopardize Your Income and Portfolio

 | Mar 20, 2023 05:49AM ET

We’ve got some superb dividends sitting in front of us in CEFs right now—as I write this, these funds yield an incredible 7.9%, on average!

That’s way more than Treasuries (especially after their yields were pummeled last week). And far more than the 1.3% dribbled out by the typical S&P 500 stock.

Best of all, many CEFs hold the same stocks you likely hold now—including household names like Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT). So you likely won’t have to ditch your current holdings to get into these funds.

Those high dividends, as you can likely imagine, get a lot of attention from investors—so much so that some may be tempted to try a technique known as “dividend capture” with CEFs. That’s where you buy just before the dividend is paid, pocket the high payout, then get out.

It’s a particularly tempting strategy with CEFs like General American Investors Closed Fund (NYSE:GAM), which pays out most of its dividend as a one-time payout at the end of the year.

It sounds like a pretty great way to pocket a big payout with minimal downside risk. But does it work? Let’s run the numbers and see.

h2 A Dividend-Capture Trade in Action/h2

Let’s rewind to the end of 2021 and say a hypothetical investor we’ll call Marvin spots this opportunity with GAM. The fund ended up yielding a high 8.8% in 2021, counting its year-end special payout, which normally drops at the end of the year. (The fund also regularly pays a much smaller dividend near the start of the year.)

Adding to GAM’s appeal for Marvin is that it holds many blue chips he knows well. In addition to Microsoft and Apple, GAM’s top 10 holdings include Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL), Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKa) (BRK.A), and the TJX Companies (NYSE:TJX).

Knowing the year-end “special” was coming, Marvin decided to buy 100 shares of GAM on the day the payout was declared on November 3, 2021. He took that big dividend and sold his shares on December 30, 2021, after the payout was distributed (note that for simplicity we’ll use the fund’s closing price on these days).

Here’s how that would have played out: