This Little-Known Fund Gets You A 7.3% Dividend From Blue Chip Stocks

 | May 23, 2022 05:33AM ET

In a plunging market like this one, it’s critical to play the long game. For us closed-end fund (CEF) investors, that means staying invested, because we simply do not want to be out of the market when the (inevitable!) bounce comes.

More important, we need to keep our income streams rolling in. They’ve never been more critical than they are now. And CEFs are throwing off some very healthy payouts these days, with the average CEF yielding north of 7% as I write this.

But there are a few things we can do to further reinforce our dividends and tone down our portfolio’s volatility. One strategy is to look at CEFs that sell covered calls. This is a lower-risk way for these funds to generate extra income, which they then hand over to us as dividends.

One covered-call CEF that should be at the top of your list is the Nuveen S&P 500 Dynamic Overwrite Fund (NYSE:SPXX),a 7.3% yielder that, as the name suggests, holds all the blue-chip companies in the S&P 500.

So if you’re holding, say, the go-to index fund, the SPDR® S&P 500 (NYSE:SPY), with its 1.3% yield, you can drop the “Y” on the end of its ticker and sub in an “XX” and get a dividend nearly six times bigger from the same underlying stocks.

We’ll flush out SPXX’s strategy and story in a moment. First, though, it’s important to fit the fund into the economy we’re dealing with now, because I think we can all agree that this is a bizarre and difficult time, with stocks falling, corporate profits still on the rise (despite last week’s disappointing earnings reports from Wal-Mart (NYSE:WMT) and Target (NYSE:TGT)) and inflation running hot. Funnily enough, this is actually a decent setup for SPXX.

h2 Look Beyond The Headlines On Inflation/h2

Let’s start with inflation, which sizzled at an 8.3% rate in April. That’s undoubtedly high, but there are a couple underlying trends here that are important to note—and that you rarely hear discussed in the press. Both of them nicely feed into SPXX’s approach.

First, inflation is actually ticking downward (albeit slowly) from 8.5% in March to 8.3% in April to an expected 7.6% in May, according to a recent survey of economists.

That’s good news, but there’s another narrative that’s getting missed here: companies are using inflation as an excuse to increase prices across the board. After all, if they were simply handing off their own rising costs to consumers, would corporate profits look like this?

h3 Companies Profit From Consumers’ Pain/h3