These 11.1% Payers Crush Stocks

 | Jun 19, 2023 05:26AM ET

Forget the latest blather from the Fed: folks just trying to get a decent income stream are still getting a raw deal these days. Treasuries pay 3.7%. Stocks? Just 1.6%.

Too bad inflation is at 4%, so our real returns are negative on both!

Sure, stocks do give us price upside, but we have to sell to get a decent income stream, shriveling our portfolio and our dividends as we do.

We can do better with high-yielding closed-end funds (CEFs). These days, plenty of CEFs yield 10%+. The three we’ll cover below do even better, yielding 11.1% on average. That means these CEFs are beating the S&P 500’s historical return in dividends alone.

While there are a lot of other high-yield alternatives out there—royalty trusts, master limited partnerships (MLPs), junk bonds and the like—CEFs have three things that put them at the head of the class:

  1. High-quality assets: CEFs, including the ones I’m about to show you, invest in multi-billion-dollar public companies like Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) and Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC).
  2. Diversification: Most CEFs have hundreds of millions of dollars in assets, or even into the billions, so they can use their heft to buy hundreds of different stocks, bonds and other assets. That gives us a lot of diversification in just one (or a handful of) funds.
  3. Big discounts: A CEF can’t issue new shares to new investors after its IPO, which simply means that it can trade at different prices (and often discounts) to its net asset value (NAV, or the value of its underlying portfolio). When we buy at a discount, we get a source of upside as it closes, driving the fund’s price higher.

So, with these principles in mind, here are three CEFs you can buy now for an 11.1% average yield, diversification and exposure to high-quality American stocks, corporate bonds and global real estate. They sport attractive valuations, too.

CEF Pick No. 1: A 9.7% Payer That Smartly Played the Tech Crash (and Rebound)

Our first stop is a fund I cover a lot: the Liberty All-Star Equity Fund (USA), which has been closely matching the S&P 500’s performance lately. That’s both surprising—because USA yields 9.7%, or about six times what the S&P 500 yields—and unsurprising, because USA is a mostly large-cap US equity fund.

USA’s Sleeper Outperformance