This 10.5% Dividend Already Doubled Our Money, With More To Come!

 | Feb 09, 2022 04:09AM ET

I have no idea why “income” investors mess around with dividend reinvestment plans (DRIPs). Most don’t yield enough to matter.

If the goal is to retire on dividends, why not “automatically” bag a 10%+ income stream and 100%+ upside? Better yet, this outsized cash flow drops into your account—and grows—every single month! It takes almost no work. (Just one small, but potent step, which I’ll show you shortly.)

Before we get to that, let’s look at just how easy it is to use this proven strategy to double—and even triple—the cash stream your portfolio is throwing off today.

This simple system looks like a garden-variety DRIP, but it has one simple “hack” that amps up our dividend and sets us up for fast 100% upside, too.

h2 Making DRIPs Obsolete/h2

The humble DRIP is a no-brainer for most folks. Offered by most brokerages, these plans automatically reinvest your dividends into stock of the company that paid them. This adds to your share count and bulks up your income stream.

Sounds great so far, right? The best part is that you typically pay zero brokerage commissions on these purchases.

Problem is, most DRIPs don’t pay enough today. For example, if the dividends are reinvested in the S&P 500, the index pays barely more than 1% today. We could lose that in an hour of volatile trading!

Even blue-chip dividend funds don’t pay more than 2% or 3%. Not even close to cash flow needed to retire on.

This is where my strategy comes in. We’re going to “unplug” our dividends from the stocks that paid them and “redirect” this cash into a group of stout dividend payers yielding 7%, on average.

The best part?

These sturdy income plays throw off a dead obvious signal when it’s time to buy or sell! All we do is wait for that signal to appear, then buy—and keep piling in our dividend cash as these powerful income plays roll higher.

That makes DRIPs obsolete!

Here’s the best part: if you build an entire portfolio based on the steady 7%+ payers I’ll show you in a minute, you could easily generate $42,000 a year in income on a $600K nest egg—nearly four times more income than an investor who sticks with the S&P 500.

I know what you’re thinking: “Brett, how can a payout that high possibly be safe?”

Let me put your mind at ease, because every month, I personally run each one through a rigorous “dividend safety check,” starting with three things that are absolutely critical:

  1. Rising free cash flow (FCF)—unlike net income, which is an accounting measure that can be manipulated, FCF is a snapshot of how much cash a company is making once it’s paid the cost of maintaining and growing its business;
  2. A payout ratio of 50% or less. The payout ratio is the percentage of FCF that went out the door as dividends in the last 12 months. Real estate investment trusts (REITs) use a different measure called funds from operations (FFO) and can handle higher payout ratios, sometimes up to 90%;
  3. A healthy balance sheet, with ample cash on hand and reasonable debt, equal to, say, 50% or a stock’s market cap (or the value of all outstanding shares) or less.
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How have we done?

Our subscribers have bagged predictable 10.3% annualized returns since our launch in August 2015. Best of all, most of that steady gain was in cash, thanks to the portfolio’s outsized dividend yield.

h2 Not Your Parents’ Dividend Reinvestment /h2

And as I mentioned above, this “retire on dividends” portfolio is perfect for dividend reinvestment because we receive big payouts every single month.

To show you what I mean, consider closed-end funds (CEFs), an overlooked corner of the market where dividends of 7% and up—often paid monthly—are common. We hold nine CEFs in our Contrarian Income Report portfolio, mainly larger issues with market caps of $1 billion or higher.

We don’t have to get into the weeds here, but CEFs give off a crystal-clear signal that a big price rise is coming. You’ll find it in the discount to NAV, which is the percentage by which the fund’s market price trails the market value of all the assets in its portfolio (known as the net asset value, or NAV).

This number is easy to spot and available on most any fund screener.

This makes our plan simple: wait for the discount to sink below its average level and make our move. Then we’ll keep rolling our dividend cash into that fund until its discount reverts to “normal.”

h2 How My 1-Step "Buy Signal" Drove a Fast 100% Win/h2

Discount-to-NAV gave us the high sign when we bought the PIMCO Dynamic Credit and Mortgage Fund (NYSE:PCI) back in May 2016.

Fund manager Dan Ivascyn, a superstar in the fixed-income world, taps PCI’s portfolio of government bonds (both US and emerging market), mortgage-backed securities and high-yield corporate bonds to generate the fund’s mega-yield, paid monthly. It was a sweet 8.7% yield when we purchased.

Not only did we collect PCI’s generous payout, but we also enjoyed a 10% price increase over the years. Thanks to this rising tide and big “dividend difference,” we doubled our money in a safe bond fund!

PCI: A Dividend Double