How To Make A Fast $510,000 On $1 Million

 | Sep 22, 2021 05:07AM ET

“Is $1 million enough to retire on?”

Paul Katzeff of Investor’s Business Daily asked me earlier this month. He was especially keen on high-paying ETFs that would throw off enough dividends to fund a nice retirement.

For example, we chatted about the Global X NASDAQ 100 Covered Call ETF (QYLD), which sells covered calls on the NASDAQ index itself to create cash flow.

QYLD’s trailing yield is a sweet 11.8%, which means million-dollar positions would have generated $118,000 in dividend income alone. Plus, the principal grew, too, thanks to price gains. The NASDAQ has been on a tear since last year, helping QYLD to 21.2% total returns (including dividends) over the past twelve months.

As neat as this retirement play was, it wasn’t the best thing to buy this time last year. With stocks seasonally weak in September and October, the real payout party typically happens in the closed-end fund (CEF) space.

The reason CEFs are the ultimate retirement investment is largely due to their under-the-radar nature. These “Rodney Dangerfield” funds get no respect from big investors. As a result, they can (and do) often trade below their net asset values (NAVs), which are the values of their underlying portfolios.

For example, one year ago Gabelli Dividend & Income Closed Fund (NYSE:GDV) traded 15% below its NAV. This fund run by legendary investor Mario Gabelli was selling for just $0.85 on the dollar. An investor paid 85 cents to buy a dollar of assets!

GDV doesn’t do anything fancy. Gabelli and his team carefully select high-quality dividend stocks. The “edge” we get from buying this CEF comes from our ability to buy it at a discount.

When we discussed GDV in these pages one year ago (and added it to our Contrarian Income Report portfolio), the fund gave us three ways to win:

  • First, GDV was yielding a fat 7.3%,
  • Plus, it was trading at a 15% discount to its intrinsic value (NAV), and
  • Its NAV was likely to increase as the market rallied (a play on the Federal Reserve’s prolific money printing).
h2 GDV Flashback: Three Ways to Profit