This Simple Dividend Strategy Could Net You An Extra $1 Million In Retirement

 | Oct 04, 2021 05:10AM ET

I know you’ve heard the common Wall Street “wisdom” that, when it comes to investing for the long haul, you’re best to simply put your money in an index fund and call it a day.

Everyone parrots this “advice.” Even Warren Buffett himself!

Today we’re going to dive into why this advice is one of the most effective ways to lose money fast (not to mention a chance at big dividends, like the growing 5% payout we’ll discuss below).

In fact, if the average middle-class person had stuck with a market-based ETF over the last seven years instead of going just one step further and investing in an actively managed closed-end fund (CEF), they would have missed out on over a million dollars’ worth of gains (and dividends).

I know that sounds hard to believe, but it’s true, and millions of people are leaving this kind of cash on the table—and more! Let’s dive into how this could happen using a common scenario.

h2 How Index Investing Can Cost You Thousands (Maybe Even a Million!) In Short Order/h2

Let’s go back seven years, to October 2014 and imagine a couple getting close to retirement and weighing different investment options. They have a nest egg of around $600,000, which is fairly believable—not far off the net worth for an American household right around retirement age, according to data from the Federal Reserve.

So they take the conventional “wisdom” we just talked about to heart and invest in the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (NYSE:VOO), which, as the name says, tracks the S&P 500 index. That gives them instant exposure to big companies like Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG), NASDAQ:GOOGL), Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), General Motors (NYSE:GM), 3M Company (NYSE:MMM), and Anthem (NYSE:ANTM).

This fund has 0.03% expenses, meaning their $600,000 incurs a meager $15 per month in fees (these, like all mutual fund and ETF fees, are deducted from the fund’s portfolio). So, in just one buy, our investors are widely diversified, fully invested in the US economy and saving on costs.

Sounds great, right?

Fast-forward to today and their nest egg would have gone up by $957,600 and is now worth $1,557,600. That’s not a bad run, and enough for a modest retirement of $5,192 per month in income as they draw that total figure down, assuming they follow the so-called “4% rule” and withdraw 4% of their nest egg every year after they leave the workforce.

Now let’s look at another route they could’ve taken: instead of VOO, they decided to go with a CEF called the BlackRock Science & Technology Trust Fund (NYSE:BST) when it launched in October 2014, at the same time our imaginary scenario begins. Today our couple would have $2,550,600, or about a million dollars more than if they’d gone with VOO.

h2 BST Laps The Market (And Then Some)