These Small Cap Dividends Pay Up To 9.1%

 | Jul 28, 2021 05:11AM ET

If you’re waiting for a pullback to put money to work, look no further than small caps.

Early last week, the S&P stopped the bleeding on a harrowing multi-day 2.9% decline. By midweek, “big cap” investors had recouped more than half of their losses.

Was that it? My guess is yes, that was a wrap on the market’s mini-drama for another month or two.

Our intrepid Federal Reserve continues to print a whole lot of cash, which serves to backstop any pullback. The Fed is still buying $120 billion in bonds per month, which adds up to “real money” after a while—nearly $1.5 trillion annually!

Speaking of which, my old colleague Grant Wasylik of Palm Beach Letter fame sent along some fun spending stats last week:

  • The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects the US government will receive $3.8 trillion in tax revenue for fiscal 2021—and spend $6.8 trillion.
  • Just in case you don’t have a calculator handy, that is a $3 trillion deficit. In one year!
  • I’m no economist (though I do read The Economist). Spending nearly twice your revenues is a recipe for pain long-term… but until then, it’s likely to be a raging economic good time.

Stock market “corrections”—declines of 10% or more—tend to happen once a year or so. With 2020 being 2020, we got two last year (March and September/October). We haven’t had one since, so some folks believe that we are due.

They’re missing the point that we just had one—in small caps. The Russell 2000 peaked on Mar. 15 and declined by about 10% over the next four months:

h2 Russell 2000 Already Corrected (About) 10%