Close Menu
Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Invest Intellect
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Commodities
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Fintech
    • Investments
    • Precious Metal
    • Property
    • Stock Market
    Invest Intellect
    Home»Investments»Coming Bond Rally ‘Sequel’ Will Send These 8%+ Dividends Soaring
    Investments

    Coming Bond Rally ‘Sequel’ Will Send These 8%+ Dividends Soaring

    July 20, 20246 Mins Read


    Investment on bonds concept. Coins in a jar with soil and growing plant in nature background.

    getty

    At my CEF Insider service, we’ve been bullish on corporate bonds (especially corporate bond–focused closed-end funds yielding 8%+) for a long time now.

    We remain so, because we’ve got a nice “goldilocks” setup for these funds right now:

    1. The US economy, while not booming at a rate that makes everyone happy, has steadily improved since the pandemic, prompting inflation to slow but remain elevated.
    2. The Federal Reserve, seeing this, is getting set to lower interest rates in late 2024, or possibly at some point next year.

    These are both bullish signs for corporate bonds—and the closed-end funds that hold them. I’m sure I don’t have to tell you they were hit hard in 2022, resulting in an array of bargains. Then the corporate defaults investors expected as rates shot higher failed to materialize.

    The result: a rally in corporate bonds throughout 2023 and 2024.

    But don’t take that to mean we’ve missed out on the bond bull market. To be sure, some bond CEFs are looking a tad overbought. Others are just not built for the lower rates that are just starting to peek over the horizon.

    Nonetheless, corporate bonds on the whole, shown in orange below by the performance of the benchmark iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (HYG), are still oversold. That’s particularly true when you compare their meager performance to the S&P 500 (in purple), which has soared since early 2022, despite that year’s crash:

    Bonds Lag

    Ycharts

    This is particularly weird since the average corporate bond went from paying about 3.2% in late 2021 to 5.8% today! Why would the market keep discounting bonds now that they’re yielding more?

    Of course, other investors have noticed this. Which is why the largest corporate-bond CEF, the PIMCO Dynamic Income Fund (PDI), saw the discount to net asset value (NAV, or the value of its underlying portfolio) it carried late last year flip to a 12% premium as more investors looked to get into corporate bonds and tap PDI’s outsized 14% yield!

    Reuters picked up this story, noting “Investors queued up for US high-yield bond funds as rate-cut hopes grow.” That’s obvious when we look at the flow of cash into HYG in the last few months.

    To be sure, we may want to hold off on PDI for now, in light of its premium. But we also want to avoid HYG, since its 5.8% payout is also low compared to yields available in CEFs—many of which are discounted—as we’ll see in a moment.

    But how do we pick the right bond CEF?

    While there are many that have beaten the broader corporate-bond market over the long term, the future is likely to be different from the past. With that in mind, let me introduce you to three options.

    3 Bond Funds

    Contrarian Outlook

    These are the three most heavily discounted corporate-bond CEFs currently. A novice investor who knows corporate bonds are undervalued relative to stocks and conditions are perfect for corporate bonds might simply go with the highest-yielding fund of our trio. That would be the Brookfield Real Assets Income Fund (RA).

    Or they might pick the most discounted CEF. That would be the Western Asset Inflation-Linked Opportunities & Income Fund (WIW).

    Or our beginner might go with the CEF with the best management team. That would be the PGIM Short Duration High Yield Bond Fund (SDHY). It’s run by PGIM, an arm of Prudential Investment Management, and has better connections and a better track record than the firms running our other two funds.

    But none of these funds check all the boxes we want to see, so which really is the best?

    Let’s start by noting the “short duration” in SDHY’s name; that’s because it holds bonds that will come to term soon. When that happens, SDHY will need to reinvest its cash into other, newer bonds.

    That’s great when interest rates are rising, but it’s a problem when rates are falling, as we’re expecting them to do pretty soon. So no matter how good SDHY’s management is, the fund is simply not structured for the current moment.

    So with SDHY out, and since WIW and RA are close in terms of their discounts, should we just go with RA, since its yield is so much higher? Well, again, one should be cautious, not least because RA (in purple below) cut its payouts by 40% late last year.

    RA Cuts Distribution

    Ycharts

    So even though WIW’s yield is lower than that of RA, note that WIW (in orange above) has a history of dividend increases and has paid out some big special dividends in the past, so you need to look past the stated yield and focus on payout history. With that in mind, WIW is the clear winner, right?

    Except, remember, we’re talking about the past here. WIW had a bunch of special payouts in a very concentrated period of time: late 2021 to the end of 2023. That was a period of very high inflation, which has since eased.

    WIW Special Dividends

    Ycharts

    If we look at all of WIW’s history, we see those big payouts happened when the growth in inflation (the orange line) was accelerating. However, since inflation is now decelerating, WIW’s special payouts aren’t likely to reappear anytime soon. Its regular dividend might even be threatened.

    Thus, WIW is not the best option of these three, and RA would be the better choice, at least until the Fed starts cutting rates. And that shouldn’t surprise anyone, since RA was better than WIW during the last time rates were elevated.

    So, RA is worth consideration right now and is likely to remain so until the Fed starts cutting interest rates in earnest, which could be later this year or earlier next year. Then it’ll be time to sell RA and go into something else.

    Michael Foster is the Lead Research Analyst for Contrarian Outlook. For more great income ideas, click here for our latest report “Indestructible Income: 5 Bargain Funds with Steady 10% Dividends.”

    Disclosure: none



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    3 Retirement Mistakes You Can’t Afford to Make

    Investments

    Safe and Short-Term Financial Strategies

    Investments

    Key Risks Every Investor Should Know

    Investments

    What’s Changed and How Your Retirement Savings Are Affected

    Investments

    When it comes to bond funds, which is better: passive or active?

    Investments

    Late Retirement Causing Career Bottleneck for Younger Generation

    Investments
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Picks
    Fintech

    Future FinTech Announces Agreement to Develop Advanced Rail Transport System

    Property

    Peach Property en perte l’année dernière -Le 24 mars 2025 à 19:00

    Property

    UK trumpets a trade deal with India – but pharma isn’t happy

    Editors Picks

    DNMiner Cloud Mining: The path for XRP participants to achieve $50,000 a day in the cryptocurrency market from novice to expert

    April 19, 2025

    Tokenization Of Commodities Is Rewiring The Future Of Global Finance

    October 20, 2025

    At least 48 people killed as goldmine collapses in Mali

    February 16, 2025

    AI and IP USA 2025: Future-proofing event aims at intersection of technology and law | Artificial Intelligence

    July 10, 2025
    What's Hot

    Conservationist warns Australia’s renewable energy push ‘fragmenting forests’ and wiping out wildlife, as new mapping exposes scale of land clearing for wind and solar projects

    October 6, 2025

    Solar energy and annexation on Bellefontaine City Council agenda

    August 25, 2024

    US senator presents the 2024 Clarity for Payment Stablecoins Act | CryptoTvplus

    October 13, 2024
    Our Picks

    Currency Dominance in the Digital Age

    August 3, 2025

    European agricultural output drops for second year in a row

    November 8, 2025

    Microbubbles active C–H bonds, converting methane into ethane and formic acid | Research

    October 23, 2024
    Weekly Top

    Safe and Short-Term Financial Strategies

    January 10, 2026

    Key Risks Every Investor Should Know

    January 10, 2026

    Octopus Energy issues £93 update to customers with a Direct Debit

    January 10, 2026
    Editor's Pick

    HSBC invests in Chinese cross-border fintech firm Dowsure

    August 22, 2025

    Dangote moves to revitalise agricultural sector

    November 24, 2025

    PCC & the new economic arms race – Opinion

    April 26, 2025
    © 2026 Invest Intellect
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.