With Treasury rates maintaining their level below 2% for 10 Year
debt, many investors have been forced to focus in on stocks for
current income needs. Fortunately, there is no shortage of options
in this market, as there are several stocks and funds that offer
exposure to high dividend payers both across the board and in more
specialized segments such as BDCs or MLPs.
Yet despite growing interest and competition in the segment, ETF
providers are by no means slowing down their expansion in the
space, launching new products all time that target high dividend
payers. In continuing with this trend, First Trust has announced
the debut of two more high dividend ETFs, potentially giving
investors a few more diversified ways to play the space (see Three
Excellent Dividend ETFs for Safety and Income).
While these new funds will face some extremely intense
competition in the dividend ETF market, their interesting
methodologies and focuses could make them solid picks for those who
are still hoping to get on the dividend ETF bandwagon. For these
investors, we have taken a closer look at the two new products in
greater detail below:
NASDAQ Technology Dividend Index Fund
(TDIV)
When investors think of tech stocks, the last thing that comes
to mind is probably dividends or high payout rates. After all,
Apple is only now beginning to pay out a dividend to investors,
while several other tech behemoths, such as Google, EMC, and Adobe,
offer nothing to investors in terms of yield either.
However, this perception could begin to change with First
Trust’s ETF that focus in on technology companies that pay out
dividends. This is done by tracking the NASDAQ Technology Dividend
Index which is a broad benchmark of tech and telecom firms
(weighted 80/20 in favor of tech) that have a yield of at least
0.5% and have not decreased dividends in the past year.
In total, the fund holds about 60 securities in its basket, with
+7% weightings going towards Qualcomm, Microsoft, IBM, and Intel.
The rest of the top seven is rounded out by Cisco, Oracle, and
Texas Instruments, suggesting that the fund could be relatively top
heavy and focused in on big and giant cap names (also read Can You
Beat These High Dividend ETFs?).
Still, this approach could help give investors access to a
segment of the economy that isn’t known for its high yields but is
still an important segment to the overall economic outlook.
Furthermore, according to First Trust research, technology firms
have seen the most growth in annualized dividends paid over the
past seven years, increasing at a rate of nearly 16.5% per
year.
While there is no way of knowing if this trend will continue
into the future, the fact remains that most dividend-heavy
portfolios are extremely light on technology firms, suggesting that
this could be an interesting compliment to many portfolios.
Moreover, the reasonable expense ratio of 50 basis points a year
isn’t too bad for the targeted exposure, although it does look to
be a bit higher than some of the other, broader dividend ETFs out
on the market today.
Multi-Asset Diversified Income Fund (MDIV)
This product tracks the NASDAQ Multi-Asset Diversified Income
index, which seeks to provide investors with solid dividend yields
from a variety of sources. By using a multi-sector/asset class
approach, the fund looks to have lower overall volatility levels
and potentially more diversification that similar dividend-focused
ETFs which just focus on a single segment or asset class (also see
the Complete Guide to Preferred Stock ETF Investing).
With this focus, the fund invests in a basket of securities
including dividend paying stocks, REITs, MLPs, preferred stocks,
and high yield corporate bonds. The fund looks to allocate roughly
20% each to MLPs, REITs, and Preferred Securities, and then 25% to
dividend paying stocks and 15% to a high yield corporate bond
ETF.
Each of these particular segments have their own stipulations,
further drilling down into only the safest, most liquid, or most
popular choices in each space. For example, the dividend paying
equities are weighted by yield and must have realized volatility
less than the NASDAQ US Benchmark index’s measure (See 11 Great
Dividend ETFs).
Meanwhile, MLPs must have volatility less than a comparable MLP
Index while REITs need to have a dividend payout ratio of less than
150%. There are many more rules for the fund (you can see them
here) but the process looks to be quite detailed and an overall
robust one for picking securities.
This results in a portfolio of about 125 securities in total
with the highest weight going to the iShares iBoxx $ High
Yield Corporate Bond Fund (HYG), accounting for all of the
high yield corporate bond exposure in the portfolio. Beyond that
fund, top holdings go to individual securities like American
Capital Agency Corp, Invesco Mortgage Capital, and Two Harbors
Investment Corp.
However, investors should note that the fund will charge a
somewhat steep 68 basis points in fees while it will rebalance on a
quarterly basis. This could leave it as a more expensive choice
than many other pure-equity dividend ETFs, but likely a competitor
on price with some of the more diversified funds in the space as
well.
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ISHARS-IBX HYCB (HYG): ETF Research Reports
(MDIV): ETF Research Reports
(TDIV): ETF Research Reports
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