These 560 Investments Pay 6%+ Dividends, With Significant Payout Growth

 | Sep 28, 2021 05:20AM ET

Return to the office? Heck, we income investors don’t need to return to work—period.

We can turn our nest egg into a cash flow machine, with big dividends to cover our monthly expenses. I’m talking about retiring on dividends alone.

Yes, we’re three buys away from kicking back, collecting payouts and watching our portfolios continue to tick higher. Best of all these dividends have upside, which will power our nest egg to new highs. They serve as the “payout magnets” that pull our investments higher with each dividend raise.

Most importantly, this “three-click” portfolio is well diversified, with 560 different income investments. These secure payouts will provide us with plenty of cushion, even if we do see another pullback later this year.

h2 A “Dividends Only” Retirement Is Entirely Within Reach/h2

Despite what most naysayer advisors will tell you, there are many ways to pull off a “dividends only” retirement—my Contrarian Income Report service is built around the idea, actually.

Here are three types of funds that can get you there. Think of them as a blueprint you can tailor based on your age and income needs (we’ll get into specific tickers for each in a moment).

  • Inflation-busting closed-end funds (CEFs) with monster yields—enough to get you a strong income stream on a reasonable upfront investment. (The CEFs we’ll talk about below are perfect foils for inflation—the boogeyman everyone is worried about now.)
  • Corporate-bond funds to diversify your portfolio and set you up for gains as volatile markets push more investors to look beyond stocks.
  • Overlooked dividend-growth funds, which grow your income stream over time and boost the value of your investment, as prices and dividend hikes are tightly linked, as we’ll see in a bit.
h2 A Growing Trend/h2

Before we go further, you should know that if you’ve chosen to pack it in early, you’re not alone: a recent survey from MetLife (NYSE:MET) revealed that more than 10% of baby boomers have retired early over the last year and a half or so.

If you follow this route, of course, you’ll need your money to last longer than you may have originally planned. And the key to that is to shift your returns away from fickle share-price gains and toward a steady stream of dividends. Let’s do that with a three-fund “mini-portfolio” built on the assets we mentioned off the top.

As I said above, this trio holds a combined 560 investments. They come from across the economy, and they nicely spread your funds between stocks and bonds, too.

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Even so, you’ll want to rotate a portfolio like this over time as conditions, such as today’s soaring inflation, change.

h2 1. ClearBridge MLP and Midstream Fund /h2

Let’s start with one of the biggest dividends in the energy business—a monster 7.1% payout—which we can grab through the ClearBridge MLP and Midstream Fund (NYSE:CEM). This CEF holds master limited partnerships (MLPs)—companies that mainly own oil and gas pipelines and storage tanks.

Giants in the pipeline business, like Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE:EPD), Williams Companies (NYSE:WMB) and Energy Transfer (NYSE:ET) dominate the fund’s portfolio.

These companies pay us high dividends because most MLPs are pass-through entities that don’t pay taxes at the corporate level. (By the way, you’ve probably heard that MLPs issue complex K-1 forms for reporting your dividends at tax time, and it’s true—they do. But buying through CEM gets you around that; the fund sends you a simple Form 1099 instead.)

That’s part of the story behind CEM’s 7.1% payout. The other is rising demand for energy, combined with production that’s still catching up following pandemic restrictions. That’s resulting in higher oil and gas prices—and distributable cash flow (DCF, a critical metric for MLPs) that’s largely recovered from the crisis, helping stabilize their payouts—and set them up for hikes.

In the second quarter, for example, Enterprise Products Partners saw its natural gas pipeline volumes bounce back to 2019 levels; the MLP generated distributable cash flow (a critical metric for MLPs) that was also up from last year and allowed it to easily pay its dividend, with a DCF coverage ratio of 1.6.

And as oil and gas prices and volumes rise, they’ll continue to fuel MLPs’ cash flow and share prices, making them, and CEM, nice hedges against inflation.

The other great thing about CEFs is there’s one number that tells us if they’re expensive or cheap: the discount to NAV (net asset value, or the value of the stocks in the fund’s portfolio). As I write this, CEM boasts a 12% discount, but that discount was much smaller than it is now—around 7%—just before the pandemic hit, so we’ve got plenty of built-in upside here.

Now let’s talk performance:

h2 CEM’s Managers Crush Their Benchmark