Fade The Market Roller Coaster With These Cool 6.7%-7.5% Yields

 | Jan 28, 2022 04:39AM ET

“America’s retirement fund” is looking awfully shaky. Income investors should consider replacing the over-owned S&P 500 Index fund—SPDR® S&P 500 (NYSE:SPY) with these underappreciated yields up to 7.5%.

The S&P 500 has face-planted right out of 2022’s starting gate, flirting with a correction (that’s a decline of 10% or more) less than a month into the year.

If you’re retired, or thinking about retirement, these drawbacks are costly. They can erase years of hard work in a few bad trading sessions.

This is why we contrarians, who focus on cash flow, lean on “preferred” stocks, instead. These are special classes of shares issued by the same blue-chip firms in the S&P 500. But rather than pay 1% or 2% in dividends, these preferred shares yield 6% to 7% instead.

h2 My Preferred Tactic For Retirement/h2

Let’s use troubled Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) as our example. The mega-bank cut its payout by a painful 80% in 2020, from 51 cents to a meager 10. It’s 20 cents now after a 2021 raise, but even then, this once-proud blue-chip dividend payer is only offering a meager 1.5% yield.

But see, that’s the dividend yield on Wells Fargo’s common shares. What if I told you the very same company pays 5x that to certain other shareholders?

The 7.5% I’m talking about is the yield on one series of Wells Fargo “preferred stock.” These so-called stock-bond hybrids have a little bit of Column A, a little bit of Column B. They’re similar to stocks in that they trade on an exchange and they represent a little piece of ownership in the company. But they’re like bonds in that they often trade around a par value, and their “dividends” are actually closer to a bond’s fixed coupon payments.

They also have some pretty cool qualities of their own:

  • “Preference”—Typically, preferred-stock dividends must be paid out before common-stock dividends, providing a little protection from being cut or suspended when the company goes through a financial rough patch.
  • “Cumulative” dividends—In some cases, if a company misses a dividend payment on preferred shares, for any reason, it must pay preferred-stock owners those missed dividends before paying income to common shareholders.
  • Huge yields—Most preferred funds offer several times more yield than the broader market right now. And just take Wells Fargo's Series L (NYSE:WFC_pl) preferreds, which yield a whopping 7.5%—more than 5x the S&P 500’s 1.5%! Most preferred funds will dole out between 4% and 7%.
Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

Preferreds provide much-needed stability and high income when the wheels come off the market, like we’ve seen lately.

h3 It’s Easier to Stay Cool With This Kind of Protection