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These 7%+ Dividends Have Been Sold Off Since 2020. It’s Gone Too Far

Michael Foster, Investment Strategist
Updated: May 28, 2026

Let me take you back to April 2001 for a second. Because that year brought a key turning point for income investors.

I’m talking about the launch of the SPDR Dow Jones REIT ETF (RWR). The fund rolled down the skids with a simple mission: Give investors an easy way to buy a diversified basket of real estate investment trusts (a.k.a. REITs) in one low-cost index fund.

It was exciting because, back then, REITs had outperformed stocks when their high payouts were reinvested. And their dividend yields were much higher than those of the typical S&P 500 name, too.

Backed by reliable rents, as well as the constant need for space to store and sell things (for businesses), as well as places to live, work and have fun (for individuals), the sense was that demand for real estate would never end.

As Mark Twain once said, “Buy land—they aren’t making any more of it!”

How have things played out since the fund’s launch? Pretty much as they had been before, with REITs continuing to outperform (even through the 2008 mess).

That is, until around 2020, when the pandemic threw them for a loop.

REITs have been lagging ever since, but the fact of the matter is, this underperformance has dragged on for far too long. With the economy and corporate profits growing strongly, I see real-estate demand outpacing the fear around the sector (including around interest rates, which we’ll talk about more in a moment) in the coming months and years.

Let’s get into why I feel that’s the case now. I’ll also show you a 7.9%-paying REIT-focused closed-end fund (CEF) that’s been unfairly caught in the downdraft (as well as another 12.9% payer to avoid).

REITs Crushed Stocks—Until They Didn’t

As you can see above RWR (in orange) did well against the S&P 500 for a long time. From 2001 to 2020, the ETF’s annualized total return beat that of stocks: 8.5% versus 7.7% for the S&P 500 benchmark State Street SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY).

Also keep in mind that this period includes the subprime-mortgage crisis. RWR fell (and briefly underperformed SPY) in that time, but recovered fast and was back in the black before the S&P 500 was.

REITs Survive a Real Estate Recession

In fact, on May 26, 2009 (shown at the right side of this chart), while the US was still in the throes of the Great Recession, RWR, in orange, was posting a positive return while SPY (in purple) was negative.

One thing made this possible: dividends.

At this time, RWR’s yield was a little higher than SPY’s: 2.3% versus 1.9%. It climbed from there as RWR’s price fell, since yields and prices move in opposite directions. That cash distribution was a real benefit to investors in those stressful times.

But as we saw a couple charts ago, in 2020, REITs started underperforming, a streak that continues today. Why?

Stocks are part of the reason: Since the pandemic, they’ve been roaring, up 14% per year on average over the last five years, much higher than their historical 10% annualized gain. This is great for stock investors, of course, but it does raise the odds of a correction, so we still want to be sure we’re well-diversified.

REITs Are to Blame, Too

Stocks’ strong performance is only one side of this story, though. On the other, REITs have seen a 5.7% annualized gain over the last five years, far lower than when they were beating stocks. That’s unusual, and it’s particularly strange that it’s lasted so long.

As a result, REITs—and in particular REIT-focused CEFs—are now providing a nice opportunity to diversify some of the profits many investors have made in stocks.

An Oversold 7.9%-Paying REIT Fund With a Solid Monthly Payout

One strong REIT fund to consider is the Cohen & Steers REIT and Preferred Income Fund (RNP), a CEF that yields 7.9% today and, yes, pays monthly, too.

Over the last five years, RNP has returned around 30%—so right around the index fund’s performance. But the key difference has been that the bulk of that return has come in cash. That’s thanks to the fund’s steady monthly payout, which has not only held steady but grown in the last five years, with a special dividend thrown in:

RNP’s “Storm-Proof” Monthly Dividend

Source: Income Calendar

RNP, as the name suggests, holds REITs and preferred shares, the latter of which trade like stocks, but in a narrow range, with fixed dividends. As such, they’re best thought of as a kind of stock-bond hybrid. Those make up around half of the portfolio and bring additional stability (as well as income).

On the REIT side, which is nearly all of the other half of RNP’s holdings (there’s about 1% in cash), we’ve got a diversified set of names. They include healthcare REITs, such as Welltower (WELL); data-center and telecom firms like Digital Realty Trust (DLR) and American Tower (AMT); as well as self-storage, in the form of Extra Space Storage (EXR); housing, shopping-center REITs and more.

Both REITs and preferreds are sensitive to higher rates, which is part of the reason why the fund sports a 5.7% discount to net asset value (NAV, or the value of its underlying holdings) as I write this.

That’s far more than enough to price in today’s “sticky” rates, which are largely the result of the Iran situation. Until that’s resolved, this fund is overly marked down, especially when you consider that it’s traded at premiums many times in the past, including in 2019, 2023 and as recently as last year.

This 12.9% Payer Is Always on Sale

With all that said, not all REIT CEFs are attractive right now. Take the Principal Real Estate Income Fund (PGZ), which has a 12.2% discount and a 12.9% yield. Unfortunately, that discount never closes.

PGZ’s “Perma-Discount”

There are plenty of reasons for this, but past performance is likely the biggest thing keeping investors away: Over the last five years, PGZ has only returned around 11%, or about a third of what RNP and RWR have delivered.

A few bad years can be a sign to buy into a fund, but when that performance trails this badly and management hasn’t changed its strategy much in response, the fund is best avoided. That’s true no matter what the discount, or dividend yield, might say.

This REIT Fund Is an Ignored AI Winner, Pays a Reliable 8.7%

REIT CEFs aren’t just due for a rebound—they’re set to soar. And an unlikely “suspect” is the reason.

I’m talking about AI.

All across the economy, AI is making REITs’ properties hot commodities, including cellphone towers, data centers—even factories and warehouses.

I know we don’t often see “AI” and “factories” in the same sentence, but hear me out here. Because one thing we don’t hear about AI (and we should!) is how it’s set to reinvent the factory floor through robotics.

Sure, robots have worked in factories for decades. But now, with AI, they can do much more, including quickly changing their roles to build new products. These new machines can also make decisions for themselves if, say, a defective part comes down the line.

Before, such a thing would have ground an assembly line to a halt for hours, even days.

As AI-powered robots improve, they’ll slash manufacturers’ costs and boost their output, setting off a factory-construction boom. And the top industrial REITs will be there, ready to cash in

Market comment

One of the most dangerous phrases in investing is: “This time is different.”

Usually, it isn’t.

Governments tell themselves deficits don’t matter until bond markets disagree.

Politicians convince themselves voters will tolerate higher taxes until they don’t.

Businesses spend years following regulatory incentives only to discover customers want something entirely different.

And investors regularly convince themselves that cycles have been abolished right before they come roaring back.

Reality has a habit of winning eventually.

This week’s essays all explore different versions of that same theme. From defence stocks and government spending to Net Zero policy, taxation, and the future of British politics, each story asks the same question:

What happens when theory collides with reality?

Investor’s daily

No Hiding from the Boom/Bust Cycle

Bill Bonner

25 May 2026 

US vs China thumbnail

Publisher’s Note: British investors should resist the temptation to read this essay purely as an American story about Trump, Congress, or China.

The more important issue is much broader than that.

For decades, much of the Western world, Britain included, operated under the assumption that finance, consumption, and asset inflation could substitute for genuine industrial strength. We outsourced manufacturing, neglected energy security, hollowed out domestic production, and assumed globalisation would keep costs low forever.

Now that model is beginning to fracture.

Governments across the world are rediscovering industrial policy, strategic resources, tariffs, subsidies, and state intervention. China embraced that approach years ago. The United States is increasingly moving in the same direction. Europe and Britain are trying to catch up after years spent believing such things no longer mattered.

That does not necessarily mean China “wins” or America “loses.” History is rarely that tidy.

But it does suggest we are entering a world where physical production, energy, commodities, industrial capacity, and national resilience matter far more than they did during the era of cheap money and frictionless globalisation.

For investors, that shift could prove enormously important over the next decade.

What’s your retirement plan ?

I Wouldn’t Want To Retire Without These 3 Investments

May 30, 2026, 7:05 AM ETGLDSLVGDXIAUILQDBIPBEPSCHDUTGAMLPXLUVNQOMPLXNEEBEP.UN:CABIP.UN:CA

Samuel Smith

Summary

  • A common misconception is that generating enough dividend income to cover living expenses is all that you need to retire.
  • I detail the three investments that I would use as the foundation of my retirement strategy.
  • I discuss how these three work together to cover a wide range of macro scenarios and help me sleep well in retirement.
  • Looking for a portfolio of ideas like this one? Members of High Yield Investor get exclusive access to our subscriber-only portfolios. 
Step-by-step path to a goal
patpitchaya/iStock via Getty Images

Many investors who are focused on building up a passive income stream from dividend- and interest-paying investments focus solely on yield. In fact, they may even focus on what they would deem to be sustainable yield, namely, yields that come from blue chip stocks, preferreds, and even bonds that they believe they can count on to be paid out consistently through thick and thin. While this is certainly important, it is not a complete approach to retirement income investing because it fails to account for some key considerations.

We Are Living in Historically Dangerous Times

In fact, we are currently in more dangerous times than we have seen since perhaps World War II, with breathtaking budget deficits, national debt levels in Europe, China, Japan, and the United States reaching levels that are nearing the point of no return, and the geopolitical situation is as fragile as ever, with the US-led global order appearing to have increasingly large cracks in it, and a threat of major economic and/or military conflict between the US and China, and Europe and Russia seemingly growing by the day. Thus, it is more important than ever for investors to ensure that they are adequately protecting their income stream from downside risks.

With this in view, in this article, I detail the three investments that I would not want to retire without to make sure that I could sleep well at night knowing there was a high probability that my investments would fund my living expenses in retirement, even if the macro situation deteriorates significantly.

Pillar #1: The Ultimate Safe Haven

The first investment that I would want to have before any other is gold (GLD). The reason I put so much emphasis on gold is that it has a longer track record than any other economic asset out there, besides perhaps land, and it has zero counterparty risk.

Additionally, given that it has survived every financial collapse, every currency failure, and every major war that has occurred throughout human history, and still retained its value, I view gold as an indispensable downside hedge, with silver (SLV) playing a similar, albeit secondary, role. There are numerous reasons why I feel especially bullish on gold today:

  1. The aforementioned runaway debt and deficit spending in the US and throughout much of the rest of the developed world will inevitably lead to more inflation and more money printing by governments, as well as an increasing loss of confidence in fiat currencies. Remember that, throughout history, fiat currencies have inevitably all gone to zero, and it appears that the dollar, the euro, the yen, and the yuan are all well on their way toward that fate.
  2. Additionally, de-dollarization is accelerating, especially with global foreign exchange reserves shrinking consistently, with central banks like China and others diversifying away from dollar holdings, and instead snatching up gold as an increasingly popular reserve asset.
  3. The geopolitical risk that was already mentioned, with potentially major conflict over Taiwan or even an expansion of Russia’s aggression in Europe as the US pulls out and Europe continues to race to get its defenses unified, could also lead to a major risk-off movement in markets, which would undoubtedly benefit gold.
  4. Finally, gold tends to outperform during economic downturns and is also relatively non-correlated with the broader stock market, making it a good portfolio diversifier and stabilizer.

The other good thing about gold in a retiree’s portfolio is that while you can simply hold the bullion (that’s the safest way to do it, especially if you have a secure yet accessible storage place), you can also invest some of it in ways that generate income, whether that be gold mining stocks (GDX), options writing ETFs like the NEOS Gold High Income ETF (IAUI) that throw off attractive monthly distributions while still maintaining some upside exposure to gold, or even investing in gold and silver bullion leases that give you full ownership of the underlying bullion, full upside potential, and a pretty nice yield paid monthly.

Ultimately, the role of gold is to provide decent returns and even potentially some income in good times, and serve as the ultimate hedge during bad times, so that when all your other investments crash and/or go to zero, you have an asset that likely will be shining and outperforming significantly, that can still deliver you the returns you need to fund your living expenses in retirement.

Pillar #2: Dependable Current Income

The next investment I would not want to retire without is investment-grade fixed-income investments (LQD) or something that appears to be the equivalent, such as a well-diversified and actively managed fixed-income fund. The reason why I would want to have this in my portfolio while in retirement is that it should serve as the core of my current income engine to meet my living expenses today. Fixed income tends to pay higher yields than common equity, since it does not have a growth component. The investment-grade rating on it means that it should be able to withstand periods of economic distress without the company having to default on its debt. In fact, even in major downturns like COVID, where they may take precautionary measures to cut their dividend, the balance sheet will likely remain sound, and they’ll be able to continue servicing their debt.

Additionally, companies often cherish their investment-grade credit ratings, therefore being more likely to circle the wagons around their balance sheet in the event that their credit rating comes at risk. They would want to do everything they can, even if it is at a major expense to the common shareholders, to protect their debt investors. Therefore, investment-grade fixed income is a great way to generate attractive yet low-risk passive income in retirement. The best part of it is that you don’t even need to sacrifice much and take only a low- to mid-single-digit yield. You can actually get 7% to 8% yields on your investment while still getting access to investment-grade securities, whether it be in the preferred, baby bond, or even the corporate bond world.

I especially like real asset-backed opportunities, as these tend to have more stable cash flows and more defensive business models and can also liquidate assets more easily and get good value for them in order to protect their balance sheets. In particular, I like the Brookfield Infrastructure Partners (BIP) and Brookfield Renewable Partners (BEP) preferreds (BIP.PR.A) (BIP.PR.B) (BEP.PR.A), as they combine attractive yields with investment-grade credit ratings and durable and defensive real-asset-focused underlying business models.

Pillar #3: Inflation-Fighting Income Machines

The third investment I would not want to retire without is dividend growth stocks, especially those that pay out decent dividends and are backed by durable and defensive business models and strong balance sheets. I think a great place to start is investing in a fund like the Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (SCHD) because it combines a dividend yield of over 3% with a dividend growth track record of over 10% per year on average over the past decade. It is filled with over 100 blue-chip dividend growth stocks diversified across a broad swath of industries.

I would want to complement that with some other attractive dividend growth sectors where it lacks much in the way of exposure, including:

  • Infrastructure (UTG)
  • Midstream (AMLP)
  • Utilities (XLU)
  • REITs (VNQ)

where you can find powerful dividend growth names like Realty Income (O), MPLX LP (MPLX), NextEra Energy (NEE), and several others.

The reason these investments are so important to me in rounding out the other two pillars is that dividend growth stocks combine current income, which can augment the income from the fixed income pillar to meet current expenses, with the growth that helps offset the long-term corrosive nature of inflation. They are also backed by durable and defensive business models and strong balance sheets, and also tend to be able to sustain their dividends better during economic downturns, thus making this pillar more sustainable as well.

Why All Three Pillars Work Together, and How to Cycle Between Them

I still think it’s important to have a fixed income pillar in addition to dividend growth stocks as a retiree because you can increase your yield a bit and also still keep your downside risk protected to a greater extent than you get with many dividend growth stocks. Thus, combining the two enables you to cover all your bases, especially alongside a disaster hedge position like gold. During strong bull markets and periods of economic expansion, having that equity exposure can give you capital appreciation and ultimately significant total return potential, which is also nice to have over the long term. This is especially true, because, in epic bull markets where valuations perhaps are getting a bit stretched, and if the Fed is having to raise rates to try to help fight an overheating economy and inflation getting too high, you can recycle some capital opportunistically into fixed income, thus locking in your income and your profits with a more defensive position, or potentially even recycling it into gold if it is out of favor.

Whenever fixed income and/or gold are in favor, you can opportunistically recycle some of that capital into dividend growth stocks that may be out of favor, to continue growing your income stream and ultimately your net worth over the long term.

The Retirement Strategy That Lets You Sleep Well at Night and Still Beat the Market

While focused primarily on dividend growth stocks, I also have significant allocations to fixed income in our retirement portfolio and to income-generating gold investments in both my core and retirement portfolios at High Yield InvestorOpportunistic capital recycling between all three of these pillars has enabled me to not only sleep well at night but also generate significant long-term total return outperformance along with below-market beta since launching our portfolio over five and a half years ago.

Today’s Quest

casca de copiat
sistemegsm.rox
Kohlman32146@gmail.com
165.140.119.146
I am extremely impressed with your writing skills as well as with the layout on your weblog. Is this a paid theme or did you customize it yourself? Anyway keep up the excellent quality writing, it is rare to see a nice blog like this one nowadays..

The blog is WordPress thru FastHosts, there is a modest monthly charge. If you can copy and paste you are good to go.

TR versus Dividend Re-investment

CTGlobal managed has two classes of shares Growth and Income. You can swap between the two classes at anytime.

Above income, with a dividend re-investment policy price

111p > 222p

Current dividend 7.6p a yield on buying price of 6.8%

Price 145p > 324p

Both shares have doubled over ten years.

Watch List Leaders

Note you may not be able to trade at closing prices, when the market re-opens.

Any watch list share where the fcast yield falls below 5% will be removed from the watch list.

Wall Street Is Betting On A Ceasefire

Markets are ending May with a strange but powerful mix: huge enthusiasm for AI-linked companies, relief over lower oil prices, and a broader rally that has spread well beyond tech. The result is a market that looks confident.

Romain Fournier

Published on 05/29/2026 at 08:57 am EDT – Modified on 05/29/2026 at 09:09 am EDT

DELL TECHNOLOGIES INC.

+3.84%

Stock Dell Technologies Inc.

THE GAP, INC.

+3.95%

Stock The Gap, Inc.

HEWLETT PACKARD ENTERPRISE COMPANY

+2.72%

Stock Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company

S&P 500

+0.58%

Index S&P 500

MICROSOFT CORPORATION

+3.47%

Stock Microsoft Corporation
Wall Street Is Betting On A Ceasefire

May is coming to an end on markets, and it is time to take stock of what the month has delivered. Dell jumped 39% after hours after reporting results and raising its guidance. The company is worth about $206 billion, which means it could be closer to $280 billion when trading opens on Wall Street. Anthropic, the private AI group behind Claude, has raised funds at a valuation of $965 billion, just above OpenAI’s latest valuation. SpaceX has reportedly trimmed its valuation target for next month’s planned IPO: the new goal is said to be closer to $1.8 trillion than the hoped-for $2 trillion. Given that people were still talking about $1 trillion only a few months ago, this is the kind of downgrade most companies would frame and hang in reception.

The common thread linking Dell, Anthropic, and SpaceX is their close connection to AI. Yet exuberance is not limited to that part of the market. Yesterday, discount retailer Dollar Tree and electronics chain Best Buy each surged more than 15% after their results. In short, there is action almost everywhere.

The S&P 500 gained 4.9% in May and is up 10.5% in 2026. That still leaves it well behind Japan, which rose 9.4% in May and 28.4% this year. But both have been flattened by South Korea, up 24% in May and 94% in 2026. Oil is down 17% in May, helped by hopes of easing tensions in the Middle East. That is good news for the economy, although crude remains up 50% this year. Gold is down 2.5% for the month and is now up only 4.4% in 2026. Bitcoin fell 4% in May and is down 16% for the year.

Today, investors are buying the idea that the Middle East may be stepping back from the edge. The S&P 500, Nasdaq, and Dow all moved higher as reports of a tentative U.S.-Iran agreement gave markets something they badly wanted: a reason to worry a little less. The reported deal would extend the U.S.-Iran ceasefire by 60 days and ease restrictions on shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important oil routes. Brent crude fell to about $91 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate dropped to around $88.

Still, the ceasefire story comes with several asterisks. Donald Trump has not yet approved the memorandum. Iran has not formally responded to the latest version. Vice President JD Vance said talks are progressing but remain ongoing, while Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent described the negotiations as a continuing back-and-forth. There are also hard reminders that this is not a done deal. Iran reportedly fired missiles at unidentified targets on Thursday. The Pentagon said Iran launched a ballistic missile toward Kuwait and used attack drones in the Strait of Hormuz.

Today’s company news shows the AI narrative is still strong. As I mentioned above, Dell surged after raising its full-year revenue and profit forecasts, a sign that the AI infrastructure boom still has plenty of market power behind it. Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Super Micro Computer rallied too.

But not every corner of the economy looks so confident. The Gap shares fell sharply after the retailer cut its annual sales forecast, pointing to pressure on budget-conscious consumers. Costco, meanwhile, reported higher fiscal third-quarter earnings and revenue, offering a more stable read on consumer spending. The company is often treated as a rough thermometer for the American household. Its results suggest consumers are still spending, especially where they see value.

Today’s economic calendar gives investors more to chew on. The April trade-in-goods report is expected to show the deficit narrowing slightly to about $87 billion from $87.4 billion. The Chicago purchasing managers index is expected to rise to 50.3 from 49.2, which would put it just above the line separating contraction from expansion. Several Fed officials are also speaking today, including Michelle Bowman, Anna Paulson, Neel Kashkari, and Mary Daly.

Change to the SNOWBALL:Buy

I’ve bought for the SNOWBALL, using spare cash, 13 shares in XSTR for £2,367.00

Only yields 4% but builds up the cash pot to buy some bargains when the market turn downs, until then keep banking the dividends when they are paid.

Where The Best Income Opportunities Are Now

May 20, 2026 DMLPLYBOPFFA

Follow Seeking Alpha on Google for the latest stock news

Summary

  • Will Barton from High Dividend Opportunities talks long-term income investing.
  • See value in commodities, especially Dorchester Minerals (DMLP), and favoring municipal bonds and preferreds.
  • REITs like Realty Income (O) are trading at attractive valuations, offering dividend growth potential despite lower yields compared to historical norms.
  • Reinvesting at least 25% of portfolio income to maintain resilience against dividend cuts and market downturns, ensuring sustainable withdrawals.
Mountain of cash and blue sky
AscentXmedia/iStock via Getty Images

Transcript

Rena Sherbill: Will Barton from High Dividend Opportunities. Great to have you back on Investing Experts. Thanks for coming back on.

Will Barton: Thanks for having me, Rena.

Rena Sherbill: It’s great to have you. So first things first, you have some sale news happening at High Dividend Opportunities. I think that’s a great place to start because a lot of people are looking at the market, wondering how to play it.

You’re going to be talking about, obviously, some high dividend opportunities and how you’re thinking about things. But let investors know, let listeners know what you have going on at your service, please.

Will Barton: Yes, right now we have a Memorial Day sale. It is 28 % off of an annual membership. So that’s five hundred thirty six dollars for the year and we’re going to be running that sale through May 26 and it’s an opportunity for people to get the first year at a discount and really give our service a full year to try it out and check out our ideas.

We find that most people who join for a year, tend to stick around for a long time. We’re a very long-term focused service, focusing on investments over three to five-year investment horizons, rather than a daily trading service.

So to get the most out of our service, find that giving people an opportunity to try us out at a reduced price for a full year gives them that opportunity to really check out all of the tools and everything that we have to offer.

Rena Sherbill: I think that notion of long-term investing is, or relatively, let’s say, relatively long-term investing, I think is a good place to start because, you know, there’s volatility in the market, a lot of questions about price and value and how to properly value companies.

How are you thinking about the long-term nature? And what do you, when you look at the, do you even look at the VIX? Are you paying attention to market volatility? Maybe let’s start there in terms of how you think about the long-term nature of investing.

Will Barton: Well, our strategy is an income focused strategy, right? So our goal is to have an eight to 10 % average yield on our portfolio at any given time and to have that solid, steady income stream coming in so that you have enough money to withdraw some if you need some, if you’re in that retirement age and you’re actually taking money out of your portfolio to live off of and you have enough leftover to reinvest.

We recommend that even if you’re retired, you plan on reinvesting at least 25% of the income that’s coming into your portfolio so that you always have money available to be buying stocks.

And in that respect, we really are permabulls. We are always buying something.

As things change, we change what we’re buying. We buy things that we believe are relatively good values right now based on current conditions. But we’re always buying stocks, right?

We’re never going to say, hey, sell your whole portfolio and let’s just hunker down into a turtle and hope that the market doesn’t keep going up.

Because I think the market today is kind of an example of how if you go back to like early March when the whole Iranian war started, if you would have told people that the Strait of Hormuz is still going to be closed in May anybody would have told you, well, you should sell all of your stocks.

And yet we’re sitting here today with the market pushing all time highs. The market doesn’t always do what you’re expecting, even if you happen to have a crystal ball and know what the future is.

I can’t tell you what the news is going to be tomorrow. And so we really focus on what’s the opportunity that we can buy today. What is the market giving us?

What holdings do we have that are getting too expensive and the market’s giving us a good price to exit and deploy somewhere else? Because even in a expensive market like today, there are still a lot of great opportunities out there to take advantage of.

Rena Sherbill: So what opportunities would you highlight right now?

Will Barton: Right now, the area that I really like right now is commodities. And in particular, we have some oil royalty companies, for example, Dorchester Minerals, (DMLP) is a royalty company. They make money from American oil that’s being pumped and sold.

Even if everything works out great and the Strait of Hormuz opens up tomorrow, the price of oil has fundamentally changed for certainly the next year or two.

And so they’re a direct beneficiary of that. They don’t have a lot of hedges. So as oil prices go up, that’s going right to their bottom line. And so we expect to see a lot more dividends coming out of them.

They pay a variable dividend. So it’s completely dependent upon quarter to quarter, how much the oil price is. And we expect to see a lot more flowing out of them.

So that’s probably one of the most immediate examples of, hey, the market is giving us an opportunity here to buy income. It’s still at a very reasonably price, reasonable price, and we can expect it’s going to be higher for the next year or two.

Rena Sherbill: And what makes you get out of that?

Will Barton: Well, the last time we actually ended up exiting when oil prices were still high because the price just got high especially with these variable dividend companies what you often see is when they declare the higher dividends people start buying it like crazy they look at well the yields high now.

So now I’m gonna buy well, okay, but it’s variable. So when oil comes back down in price the dividends will come back down and so we exited that when it was trading in the mid thirties and we just decided that, okay, well our forward outlook is that the distributions are going to be smaller and it no longer fits our investment profile.

We started buying it back last December when oil was low and we’ve had kind of a little fortunate bounce in oil prices, but the price was lower and even at the lower prices, we determined that, okay, the distribution still makes sense, still achieving our goals, still helping us hit our targets.

And now even right now, I think today’s trading around 28-ish, it’s still a very good price to be buying to take advantage of what you can expect the distributions to be over the next year or two.

Rena Sherbill: How much does the interest rate conversation affect how you’re looking at things? And does that correlate at all to dividend cuts? Do you see that being a correlation at all? There were, you know, we have a new Fed chair. There’s a lot of talk of expectations being changed, that rate hikes are coming. How much does that play into your thinking?

Will Barton: We generally don’t try to predict what interest rates are going to do in terms of choosing our investments. It’s one of those things that, it has a direct and immediate impact, but predicting them is hard. We have our market outlook every week where we try to predict what’s going to happen.

And just like everybody else, we can be as wrong about rates as anybody else can, right? So what we do again, is we kind of go back to that taking the opportunities that the market gives us.

The 30 year is up a lot today, we’re buying municipal bonds. We have a couple of municipal bond funds in our portfolio.

Is the current height going to be as high as it goes? Who knows, right? It could keep going to 6 % for all I know. But what I do know is that when you’re getting 5.1 % on municipal bonds, compared to the last 20 years, that’s a really good interest rate to be receiving.

If it keeps going up, the price will keep coming down. But again, we’re investing for the dividend.

So when we get the dividends, we’re reinvesting 25 % of it. If the price is lower in the future, we’re happy to just average down and get higher yields. In the grand scheme, when you’re at 20 year highs on interest rates, in the big picture, they’re going to be lower at some point in the future.

We’re still going to be investing at some point in the future. So I’m very eager to be taking advantage of higher rates because they manifest themselves as lower prices for income investors.

I see a lot of dividend stocks are lower in price because interest rates are high, because traders are using that calculation of, well, I can get X percent from the U.S. Treasuries and I’m only getting X percent from this dividend stock.

So I’m going to sell dividend stock and go invest in treasuries today. And for those of us who are just buying the dividend stocks with the plan of holding them for the next three, five, 10 years, we’re buying at a lower price than we’ve been able to buy in the last three to five years.

And that’s in an environment where the stock market itself is trading at multi-decade high valuations.

For income investors, high rates are great, right? We’re getting paid interest rates. That’s what generates our income at the end of the day. It’s coming from interest rates, higher interest rates means we’re getting higher income for every dollar that we’re able to invest today.

And we should be taking advantage of that because maybe it goes on for the next year or two. Maybe it could continue for the next five years. I doubt it, but possible. But at some point in the future, I guarantee we’re going to be looking back at 2025, 2026 and say, boy, I wish I would have bought more dividend stocks back then because they were so cheap.

Rena Sherbill: What is something in your portfolio that you would say you’re at the tail end of the three to five years thought process in terms of holding it? What might be something that investors might be surprised to know that you still hold? Or maybe something that is a good example of holding onto something despite what market sentiment might be telling you?

Will Barton: I would say the example right now that is probably going to be reaching that tail in the next couple of years is our agency mortgage rates. We bought those as the prices were collapsing, they were becoming very unpopular because they are very interest rate sensitive.

And what we saw in prior cycles is when interest rates get cut down and you have that huge spike where the 30 year mortgage and the, and the overnight Fed rate has a huge gap.

You’ll see a big, huge spike up in the prices of these. you know, we, we’ve seen a couple of the last year and half since about early 2025, they’ve really been spiking up. they’re starting to trade at a premium to book value now, and they’re starting to gain more favor among traders. we believe that we have a lot more upside to go.

But probably within the next year or two, especially if we have a situation where the U S economy breaks and the fed starts cutting rates like crazy, they’ll have a blowout.

And at that point, we’re going to have to make the decision whether we want to hold through the cycle or whether we want to sell an exit. know, most recently, an example that we actually ended up exiting it a lot earlier than we intended to was LyondellBasell (LYB) because of the situation that I ran, their price just ran away from us.

We predicted fair value was between $80 and $90 and it got there. okay. Love you, goodbye, mostly goodbye. And we redeployed that money where it can make us more dividends later.

Rena Sherbill: How did you arrive at the 25 % figure in terms of reinvestments?

Will Barton: We did that through a combination of our experience and we did some pretty extensive back testing using a tool called Portfolio Visualizer that lets you test with a portfolio what it looks like as you’re withdrawing money.

Our goal was to ensure that the amount you’re taking out is low enough or high enough that it can absorb any dividend fluctuations, know, natural dividend cuts that you’re going to get through a crisis situation.

So we back tested it against both the great financial crisis and through COVID with actual holdings that we actually held to make sure that you had a solid cushion of reinvestment there so that the dividend cuts never actually impacted your ability to withdraw money.

And then also ensure that you’re reinvesting some at all times so that you can build up that cushion. And so we did that through a combination of both comparing notes from all of us at Seek High Dividend Opportunities. We compared our holdings and what we experienced with our own personal drawdowns and then did some back testing using the portfolio visualizer tool to make sure that there was a big enough cushion of safety there. you know, obviously nothing is a hundred percent certain.

You can’t predict the future, but for the great financial crisis and for COVID, which was two of the largest dividend cut runs in the history of the stock market, it was sufficient for those.

And really from our perspective, it gives you that even if you went over that 25 % right cuts went deeper. You found yourself starting to run low. It wasn’t enough. It gives you that warning signal that you can say, hey, I need to change something in my portfolio.

I need to change something about what I’m withdrawing and you can do that very early on and all financial problems. If you know there’s a problem and you address it sooner, it’s a lot easier to fix than if you wait until you’re in mid-disaster and the sooner you solve financial problems, the easier they are to solve, the less you have to sacrifice.

And you don’t want to be finding out when you’re 90, 95 years old, hey, my portfolio is not going to last the rest of my life.

I mean, right at this moment, most people are feeling invincible, right? Stock market’s at all time highs. They’re looking at these big balances and it’s for people who have went through the dot-com bust, who went through the great financial crisis.

I think a lot of investors today who are in their 60s, 70s, they lived through them, but they weren’t necessarily investing a lot through them because they were still in their working years. And in your working years, it’s very easy to close your eyes and ignore the losses and just keep contributing more money because you have income coming in.

And it becomes a lot more challenging when you don’t have a job that you can just go, okay, well, I can just throw a few more thousand dollars in every paycheck and be fine.

You don’t have that option and you don’t have the distraction of, I have to go to work and I’m not paying attention to what’s happening in my portfolio. I’ll see what next quarter, right? And when you get to be in your sixties and seventies and you actually start living off of the money and you’re watching that portfolio value every single day.

I think a lot of people look at it and they’re looking today and they’re going, wow. Where everything’s great. I have lots of money. I’ve made so much money in the past five years. you know, stock market pretty much rebounded from COVID very quickly. It wasn’t an extended drawdown.

So I think people will have a false sense of confidence that well, whatever, if it goes down for a few months, I’m fine. I have six months of reserve. have, you know, 12 months open emergency fund or whatever it is. I can pay my bills.

The stock market will recover, dot-com bust it took 10 years for it to get back to even without you withdrawing any money. And if you withdrew any money at all, it took even longer.

Well, if you’re 70 years old and the dot-com bust happens, 10 years is a long time to go without withdrawing any money from your brokerage account. And I think a lot of people just don’t have that perspective, but that can happen again because they lived through it, but they weren’t investing through it.

They weren’t dependent on their portfolio through it. And that gives them this false sense of confidence that, that’s not going to happen to me. it’s something that you can’t understand until you’re in that position. And when you’re in that position, it’s too late.

Rena Sherbill: Is there something that you mostly hear from subscribers in a market like this? Are you getting a lot of questions? What do you, what’s mostly the feedback that you get from subscribers or what are the most asked questions?

Will Barton: The most asked questions inevitably take the format of given this news story and they’ll pull up some news story whether it’s about Iran or whether it’s about interest rates or you know, whatever the president tweeted this morning You know given this news story. How should this impact how we invest? that’s probably the most frequent question that I see and

sometimes people will give me little bit of pushback and resistance when I say it doesn’t matter. We’re not investing because of what we think the news cycle is going to be. I’m not buying something going, okay, well, I think interest rates are going to go up 50 basis points, so I’m gonna buy this.

No, I’m buying it because I think it’s cheap. If interest rates go up, maybe it gets cheaper. If they go down, it’s gonna go up. Eventually interest rates are gonna go down. I don’t know when.

I don’t need to predict when because I’m getting paid a dividend to sit there and collect money wventually things will go or will turn around. I mentioned the MLP earlier and when we underwrote that we said, okay are we happy with the distribution that they will pay if oil is $55 a barrel?

We said yes, we didn’t know oil was gonna go up to $100 a barrel when we bought that we have no clue. If I had to guess, obviously at some point in the future, I can predict that something’s going to happen somewhere in the world at some point and oil is going to go up to $100 a barrel.

I don’t think that’s a hard prediction to make. I had an economics professor who liked to say, it’s very easy to predict what will happen. It’s extremely hard to predict when it’s going to happen. And so we just position ourselves to be buying.

And we know that at some point in the future conditions will change. We know that at some point in the future oil will go up, interest rates will come down. And we position ourselves for those eventualities and we’re collecting dividends the whole time that we wait. And when they happen, then we’ll make that decision whether or not to sell.

Rena Sherbill: You mentioned REITs before, and I know that’s one of your main focuses at High Dividend Opportunities. What would you say about the real estate space right now and any other kind of points to highlight for investors when it comes to REITs?

Will Barton: Well, real estate is a very interesting investment right now because it is one of those that high interest rates are bad, right? In the real estate world, everybody borrows money. doesn’t matter how wealthy you are or how much cash you have on hand, you’re going to use leverage, you’re going to use mortgages, you’re going to leverage it because that’s how money is made in real estate. And it’s an asset that’s very easy to borrow against. And so…

When you have interest rates high like they are right now, we’ve seen a big pullback in commercial real estate of money moving in. People have been buying less. We’re starting to see some private equity start taking big stakes in real estate now, and that’s been kind of a tailwind for values.

they’re buying because the cap rates, the capitalization rates, is essentially how much money you’re getting from that real estate compared to how much you pay, are at 20 year highs. And so they’re buying low.

And then on the other hand, you have the factor that real estate is considered a relatively safe asset. It’s a hard asset that people like to buy when there’s instability. And so that kind of positions real estate right now to, see a big recovery through the combination of interest rates coming down and generalized fear about the economy. you know, and there will be moving from what’s

a very low price today, potentially go much higher in price. so real estate is one of those assets that we really like right now. The options for high yield in real estate are not what they used to be. There used to be a day back in the early 2000s, REITs were a fringe alternative investment that only crazy people invested in.

And it didn’t really get tracked a lot of attention. So you could get eight, nine, 10 % yields was the normal. Even today at today’s lower prices, you’re more in that three to 6 % range for most of them.

There’s a few pockets of opportunities where you have some, a little bit of distress, where there have been some real issues with tenants having trouble meeting their rent obligations and stuff. and so that creates lower prices and higher yields. I think those areas are potentially really good opportunities. Obviously you have to deal with the risk that the tenants could continue to see deterioration in their ability to pay the rents.

And so you got a little bit of risk to go with that reward right there. But the overall picture REITs are in a position to see some big improvements in valuation. You have Realty Income (O). That’s out there trading for 14, 15 times FFO. It’s rock solid, high quality REITs you can get. They shouldn’t be trading that cheap. They should be trading in the high teens, low twenties.

But especially when you compare them to the rest of the S &P 500 that is trading at those higher multiples, and it’s just dirt cheap right now. So definitely something that’s worth adding to.

It becomes a little bit of a struggle for us with our 8 to 10 % goal, because a lot of the REITs just aren’t paying those high dividends right now. But you definitely have some great dividend growth opportunities there. And if your portfolio is already high yielding and you can afford to hold some of those lower, you know, five, 6 % yielders.

There’s a lot to choose from in that ballpark.

Rena Sherbill: When you talk about the factors that you’re looking at in terms of how high the yield is and structures that prevent you from getting into things, are those absolute red lines that you adhere to? Are there any exceptions that you make to those rules?

Will Barton: We definitely do. Our goal is an average of 8 to 10 percent, right? So we want the whole entire portfolio to be averaging in that range. In the current environment, we’re able to have some very high yielders, which also then gives us room to go on the low end and hold some of the lower yielding companies that have some dividend growth.

Usually if we’re looking at something that’s below 7%, we want to have a growth component or an expectation that this is a company that will be able to gross dividend in the future. We don’t draw a hard line.

But we are always conscious of what is this doing to our overall portfolio yield? Because you know, that’s what that’s what we promise our members is that we’re going to find a way to keep our portfolio averaging in that eight to ten percent range and growing your income every year

And that’s, you know, in some environments is easier than others. Currently, there’s a lot of high yield options out there. And that’s made it a lot easier for us to take on some of the lower yielding picks and take advantage of being able to realize some capital gains and have some capital gains growth as well. In addition, you know, we go back to an environment like 2021, we were struggling to hold the seven to 8 % line, right? Because

The yields were just, everything was so expensive. And it was a very different interest rate environment. so, depending on the environment, depending on what the market gives us, we will take advantage of opportunities where we see them, but we’re going to remain very steadfast on averaging that 8 to 10 % through the portfolio as a whole.

Rena Sherbill: Last time you were on, which was at the end of February, you were talking about being interested in high yield preferreds. Anything to note there or any updates to make there? You were talking about AGN CZ in particular.

Will Barton: And we’re still kind of in that zone, right? Where preferreds have actually come down a little bit in price, yields have gone up a little bit.

We’ve talked a lot about (PFFA), Virtus InfraCap, and that’s a preferred ETF that really kind of mirrors our strategy in the preferred space.

They have a lot of overlap with our holdings and they invest in preferred on a leverage basis. So that’s an ETF that is kind of really a great place to start to get invested in the preferred right away and have exposure to a wide variety of them.

But preferreds have generally come down in price because they’re tied to that long-term yields. As the 10 to 30 year treasury yields go up, preferred prices will come down and we still see a great buying opportunity.

Our preferred portfolio, I think we have 48 prefers in our portfolio right now.

And so that remains a very large part of our overall strategy to provide us that fixed solid income that’s coming in every single quarter and is going to be more resistant in the event that the economy gets weakened.

So that’s definitely an area that we’re still continuing to focus on.

Rena Sherbill: And any other notes to make about the bond market? George Noble was on recently talking about the disarray that he sees in the bond market. Anything to note there or anything else to note there?

Will Barton: I think it’s a lot of people make mountains out of molehills in the bond market, especially when you start getting politics involved. People like to talk about the deficit. Every once in a while, you’ll see the stories start popping up about how, well, the treasury auctions are getting weak and it’s because people don’t have confidence in the US government or whatever.

And that’s one of those things that I think the fear plays well on TV. I don’t buy it. know, treasury bond options fail because interest rates are going higher and the people aren’t going to go bid on something when they believe the price is going to go down. So that’s, well we think the US government is going to default on their, on their bonds or we don’t have confidence in the U S government or anything like that.

It has nothing to do with that. It’s purely a transactional thing. and so I think a lot of people interpret the short-term trading that’s being done by institutions and hedge funds to try to squeeze a little bit of money out of bonds because it’s a zero risk asset, right? You can make a trade with bonds and if you mess up, well, it’s not, you’re not going to lose your shirt in the bond market.

And so I think a lot of people see, some movements that might not be expected or might be larger than expected. And they try to read way too deeply into it.

And ultimately at the end of the day, the U S government bonds are rock solid. If they go under, it doesn’t matter. Your brokerage is the U S dollar is failing. So guess what your brokerage is dominated in. It’s all U S dollars.

It’s one of those catastrophic things that it doesn’t matter. It’s like, okay, well, what if an alien comes and blows up the entire earth? Okay, then it doesn’t matter what you invested in, does it?

And it’s kind of one of those situations where I think it plays well on TV. It gets people worked up over things. Some people like to use it for political gain to, you know, attack the other side over the deficits or whatever.

But I don’t think there’s any sign that anybody is concerned about the US government’s ability to pay its debt. The US is still one of the top economies in the world. We’re going to remain that way for the foreseeable future and people are going to want to own US Treasury bonds.

And so I think a lot of that tends to get glazed over try to get attention, but at the end of the day, it’s one of the safest investments out there. the pricing movements are reactions to what people think treasury price bonds are going to do.

They’re trying to run ahead of it. They’re trying to get ahead of the curve. They’re trying to profit from it. They’re not voting on whether or not they think the US government is well-ran or poorly-ran or whatever, right?

They are just trying to make money and they’re trying to predict what people are going to do. people can be predictable sometimes and sometimes they can be very unpredictable.

Rena Sherbill: Yeah, I bet more alien questions coming our way given the news cycle too. I’d look out for those.

Will Barton: Yes, you need an ETF.

Rena Sherbill: I bet it’s not that far away. I can see the letters forming already.

What else would you encourage investors to be thinking about or not thinking about these days? Income investors in particular.

Will Barton: I think the biggest thing to think about is to have realistic expectations for the future.

The market has been doing very well. It’s been very strong and it becomes easy to just kind of assume that what’s happening is going to continue to happen. And I think it’s very important to take a look at your personal finances, and take a look at, this is what is in my portfolio.

Do I need to take money out of this portfolio? Am I going to need to take money out in the next five years? And, well, core inflation is going to exclude things like gas prices and food.

Gas prices in food when you’re retired are going to be very significant to how much money you need. They’re not optional expenses for you. So you want to make sure that you have some flexibility, both in your personal budget and in your portfolio. If you’re withdrawing money, especially, you want to make sure that you can withdraw money without being forced to sell stocks.

If you sell a share, you want it to be because you’ve made the affirmative decision that this investment is no longer good for me or this investment is too expensive. want to take profits, which is hopefully what’s happening.

You don’t want to be forced to sell because you have to pay your electric bill next month because that’s what will kill your portfolio very quickly. so I think investors kind of need to, it’s a great time to do an assessment.

How much money am I relying on my stock portfolio for? How much flexibility do I have in my personal budget? If things go up in price that I can, what expenses am I willing to get rid of? What expenses am I willing to, that I can’t or am unwilling to change?

And is my portfolio producing enough income so that if we see dividend cuts, if we see the economy collapse, am I still going to be okay?

Because if you reach that point where you can say, yeah, I not only answer is going to be okay, it’s going to be easy. you know, I’m not going to have to worry about my personal bills.

And when you can get to that point, that allows you to look at the stock market with a lot of clarity and be very calm about the swings that happen because you know, my bills are taken care of. All I have to worry about is what is the best decision right now for my investments and you’re making investment decisions based on your investments, not based on any external, you know, concerns or fears about being able to cover your home expenses.

And that’s kind of a really what the income method is designed to do to provide you that base so that you know, my bills are paid. Now that my bills are paid, now I can go into the market. Now I can look out there and decide to speculate.

When something crashes, I can say, well, we go buy a few shares of this and see if it recovers because I don’t have to worry about paying my bills next month. That’s taken care of. I can now just look at the companies, decide what companies I want to buy.

And I think that’s really where a lot of people, they get turned around in the market. They get focused on, well, I want to make the most of my money right now.

But if you can’t pay your bills, it doesn’t matter. If you owned Amazon in 2001 or 2002, it didn’t matter that Amazon was going to become one of the greatest investments in the next 20 years. Because if you had to sell it in 2001 or 2002, you didn’t realize that upside. If you had to pay a bill, you sold it to pay a bill. You don’t get to participate in the upside from now on.

I think our investment style isn’t contradictory to people who want to invest in those growth investments and try to get those, you know, those big huge wins and try to predict the next Nvidia (NVDA) or who want to participate in the SpaceX (SPACE) IPO and see if that’s going to blow up and to be the next big thing. It’s not contradictory to that.

It’s making sure your bills are paid so that you can take your excess and go out there and make those bets, invest in those companies and not have to worry, not be dependent on it to meet your personal financial needs.

Rena Sherbill: Appreciate the conversation, Will. It’s High Dividend Opportunities on Seeking Alpha. Any final words?

Will Barton: I also would like to put out a plug here. We have a new YouTube channel, it’s Income Method Investing.

And we are releasing videos on that for people who like the video format. And so that will also be available to members through our video on Seeking Alpha as well. That’s a new project. It’s a little bit of a different format for me. I’ve been used to being a writer, but we’re expanding into the video world as well now.

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