This 8% Payer Crushes ETFs and We Get to Buy for 84 Cents on the Dollar

 | Mar 30, 2023 05:18AM ET

On the surface, investing through an index fund sounds great. It’s simple, cheap and, as you’ve likely heard over and over, few active managers beat their benchmarks anyway.

But we closed-end fund (CEF) investors know better. Truth is, there are lots of CEFs out there that beat their benchmarks while throwing off healthy dividends north of 8%.

And when you step beyond the world of stocks, into areas like corporate bonds, REITs and municipal bonds, benchmark-beaters are the norm with CEFs. That’s because those markets, which are much smaller than the stock market, give a savvy manager lots of advantages—like a well-stacked contact book—that a “robotic” index fund just can’t match.

But today I want to talk about equity CEFs. In a moment, I’ll show you one that’s crushed the S&P 500 over the last decade—and the gap is getting wider! Plus this underappreciated fund pays a dividend that’s averaged around 8% over the long haul.

I think you’ll agree that this is a much better way to invest than through an index fund like the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (NYSE:VOO)—especially since the average index fund only pays 2.1% today.

h2 Forget Beating the Index—Even Matching It Is a Boon With CEFs/h2

Before we get to that fund, consider this: even if you can just match an index with a CEF, you’re still way ahead, because you’re getting most of your dividend in cash, rather than “paper” gains. And we’re happy to take cash these days, with banking crises and an unpredictable Fed roiling the markets.

Consider, for example, a CEF called the General American Investors Closed Fund (NYSE:GAM), which holds well-known names like Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKa) (BRK.A) and TJX Companies (NYSE:TJX). Over the last three years, its total return (including dividends) has matched that of the market:

GAM Tracks the Market—With a Critical “Dividend Difference”