What CEF Dividend Cuts Mean for Investors

 | Mar 09, 2023 05:20AM ET

Plenty of CEF investors worry about dividend cuts. And for sure, they’re something to keep in mind. But CEFs are not the same as stocks. When we invest in high-quality CEFs, there are a couple of other things we need to remember when we catch wind of a cut:

  1. High-quality CEFs will sometimes reduce payouts by a small amount so they can redeploy capital into oversold bargains. I’ll have more to say on this in a moment, but the upshot is that it holds the potential for us to make more gains from this move than we lose in dividends.
  2. As mentioned, these cuts are usually small, reducing the yield by only a small amount (again, we’ll demonstrate this below).

Before we go further, we really should stop for a moment and talk about the importance of diversification. Across a portfolio of multiple CEFs, you can ensure your income won’t change much if you choose funds that are profitable, have big discounts to net asset value (NAV, or the investments in their portfolios), and solid fundamentals that will make them profitable over the long term.

Take, for example, two very different funds: the Nuveen Real Asset Income And Growth Closed Fund (NYSE:JRI), a holding that mainly holds shares of real estate investment trusts (REITs), utilities, and pipelines, as well as bonds issued by these firms; and the corporate bond–focused PIMCO High Income Fund (NYSE:PHK). Both funds have cut dividends in the past:

h2 JRI Reduced Its Payout More Than PHK …