The 60/40 Portfolio Can’t Hold A Candle To This Dividend Strategy

 | Oct 06, 2022 05:32AM ET

I hate to hear about investors using “rules” like the 60/40 portfolio (where you devote 60% of your holdings to stocks and the rest to bonds) to invest their hard-earned cash.

The problem with “rules” like this one is that they lack the ability to adjust to changing markets, like the mess we’ve been living through this year, which has walloped stocks and bonds in equal measure.

h2 Advisors See the Light on Oversimplified “Rules” Like the 60/40 Portfolio/h2

It seems like advisors and the business media are finally accepting this hard truth. Recently, banks like Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) and JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) have been urging clients to shift away from the 60/40 setup, while publications like Barron’s and Kiplinger are writing articles literally titled “The 60/40 Portfolio is Dead.”

It’s great to see, but if they were really serving their clients (and readers), they’d go further and recommend our go-to income plays, closed-end funds (CEFs).

They’re a much better alternative, for a simple reason: they pay dividends that are high enough for many people to live on without having to sell a single share in retirement. Thanks to the pullback, you can easily find CEFs dishing yields north of 10% these days, while trading at big discounts to net asset value (NAV, or the value of their underlying portfolio holdings).

With your bills paid, you can sit back, collect your dividends and basically tune out the movements of stock prices, Or better still, you can use strategies like dollar-cost averaging to reinvest your payouts and “automatically” take advantage of the bargains this pullback has served up.

h2 CEFs: Purpose-Built to Ride Out Market Storms/h2

To explain how high-yield CEFs help investors during bear markets, let’s take the example of John and Jack.

John has a 60/40 portfolio, like his financial advisor has recommended: 60% stocks, 40% Treasuries. Jack, on the other hand, has put his money in CEFs—specifically the Liberty All-Star Equity Fund (NYSE:USA), PIMCO Corporate & Income Opportunity Fund (NYSE:PTY) and the Cohen & Steers Quality Income Realty Fund (NYSE:RQI).