I hate to see folks trying to time this banking mess with regular stocks like JPMorgan Chase
& Co. (JPM). Especially when they can easily swap their big-bank stocks for âpreferredâ dividends yielding 8% and up!
Thatâs a far sight better than the magic trick mainstream investors are attempting, as they try to dodge into big banks like JPM at just the right moment.
Worse, JPM only yields 3% today. And you and I both know that markets can thrash around for weeks looking for a bottom.
Thatâs why, instead of squinting at price charts, weâre calmly picking up some sweet âbackdoorâ dividends from these very same banks, but with a yield thatâs 173% bigger.
Weâre doing it through preferred shares, which are part stock, part bond and all dividends. And because banks issue most preferreds, theyâre the contrarianâs choice for profiting from this mess.
Cool thing is, you likely wonât even have to switch investments to buy them. Own JPM âcommonâ shares but want to double your dividend? No problem. Trade them for JPMâs Series Y preferreds and youâve got a nice 6.125% payout rolling in.
Voila.
Plus, preferred shareholders are typically paid before âregularâ stock and bond holders. Thatâs a nice plus in a bank panicâstricken economy like this one. (Not that we think JPM, which has been around in one form or another almost as long as America itself, is going anywhere!)
Trouble is, even folks who know about preferreds often blow their opportunity right off the bat by buying them through an ETF like the iShares Preferred & Income Securities ETF (PFF
).
Sure, youâll get a 6% payout ⊠but youâll also âbake inâ ho-hum performance. Thatâs because personal connections between fund managers and preferred-stock issuers matter when it comes to getting the best new preferreds. As a result, actively managed funds almost always top âroboticâ ETFs here.
This is why we go one floor up from the ETF crowd and join the closed-end fund (CEF) party. CEFs boast even bigger yields than PFF, and most pay monthly.
Plus, CEFs, unlike ETFs, tend to have fixed share counts for their entire lives, so they can trade at different levels than their net asset values (NAV, or value of their underlying portfolios)âand usually at a discount.
An 8.2%-Yielder With âDiscount-Drivenâ Upside
These discounts are the key to our gains, as weâll see with our âbackdoorâ bank play: the Flaherty & Crumrine Preferred Securities Income Fund (FFC).
This one is as tilted toward the finance sector as they come: about 56% of its portfolio comes from banks, with another 22% from insurance companies.
Thatâs a nice mix, as insurers invest their floatâor the premiums customers payâin safe fixed-income securities. But they donât have the same liquidity issues some banks can run across if customers decide to withdraw all at once.
FFC hedges us from that risk in another way, too, with preferreds from big players like Citigroup
(C), Wells Fargo
& Co. (WFC) and Morgan Stanley
(MS) making up the bulk of the bank issues in its top-10 holdings.
A benchmark beater? You bet. FFC has more than doubled PFF since the ETF launched in â07 (FFC itself is more than 20 years old, so itâs got lots of history).
Now letâs talk payouts: as I write this, FFC yields 8.2%, much more than PFF. The fund has reduced its monthly payout over the last year, from $0.124 a share to $0.093 today, but thatâs to be expected after the across-the-board tire fire that all assets (including preferreds) suffered.
Plus those cuts come with a bright silver lining: theyâve freed management to go after bargain-priced preferreds, setting us up for gains. And I donât know about you, but Iâm more than happy to give up a bit of income for upsideâespecially when weâre still getting an 8.2% payout!
In fact, we can expect some of that upside from the closing discount: thanks to the bank panic, FFCâs discount is now 6.6%, well below its five-year average of 2.25% and miles below the premiums it was booking just six weeks ago.
And while we can expect this banking drama to play out for months, with potentially more downside to come, our CEF discounts do help us mitigate that risk while we collect our rich payouts.
The capper is that Flaherty & Crumrine knows the preferred game and is right at home bargain-hunting skittish markets like this one: the company has been in CEFs (and preferreds) since its founding in 1983. And FFCâs manager, Bradford Stone, has been with the firm since FFC rolled off the line 20 years ago.
Brett Owens is chief investment strategist for Contrarian Outlook. For more great income ideas, get your free copy his latest special report: Your Early Retirement Portfolio: Huge DividendsâEvery MonthâForever.
Disclosure: none