Barron's wrote about increasing financing costs for BDCs and other segments of the private credit space. BDC stands for business development company. There are many publicly traded BDCs as well as private pools. Barron's mentioned Van Eck BDC ETF (BIZD) which is down 12% YTD. It yields a little over 9% and oddly, the BIZD web page reports an expense ratio above 12%. I don't know what the story is unless it's acquired fund fees but that 12% number is repeated in multiple spots. The fund is a good source of names though, the holdings, for anyone so interested in learning about BDCs.
Let's start with the price only return of some historically yieldy but volatile pockets of the market.
If you don't remember Nordic American Tanker (NAT), it was a huge favorite of the all dividends all the time crowd at Seeking Alpha. Annaly Mortgage (NLY) is similarly loved by that crowd. Here are the total return numbers for those four.
The yields and the negative compounding is far less dramatic than what we see now with the crazy and even not so crazy high yielding derivative income funds. Still though, it is difficult to compound positively when getting a high yield and taking it all out. Deciding to implement that strategy, negatively compounding, isn't as bad as implementing it and not realizing it will probably compound negatively. I see touts on Twitter occasionally boasting about how they have portfolios that "yield" 20-40%. They don't.
At the other end of the yield spectrum, Morningstar lamented the historically low yield of for domestic stocks at less than 1.2% versus 2.6% for foreign equities. Dividends aren't necessarily the tax-friendliest way to go but many people do like yield. Tweaking a concept we've looked at before of allocating a small slice to a crazy high yielder, I built out the following.
SPY plus SSO equals 100% S&P 500 subject to any volatility drag from SSO. NFLY could be thought of as an overlay of Netflix' volatility. We use NFLY for blogging purposes because it avoids crazy CEO risk and it is not the most volatile name in the YieldMax universe. SSO historically tracks closely to 2x the S&P 500 far more often than not.
ACWX, a different index than what Morningstar cited, has yielded a little over 3% while the portfolio we built is just ahead of the 2.6% that Morningstar referred to. If a catastrophe befell NFLY it would be a very minor setback for the portfolio. SSO could malfunction of course but the fund has been around since 2006 and the worst relative year in a down year appears to be 2018 when it was down 14.62% while SPY was down 4.56%. In 2007, it was up 1.04% versus a gain of 5.14% for SPY which is a different kind of bad outcome.
There is of course an element of unknown outcomes in terms of what any crazy high yielder will distribute but someone wanting to seek/target a little higher yield could add just a little bit to the crazy high yielding sleeve without the risk that the whole portfolio looks like TSLY which is down 85% on a price basis since its late 2022 inception.
Not investing related but the NY Post reported about an ongoing fraud ring that allegedly poisoned Mt Everest hikers to get them to pay to be airlifted off the mountain. Included was this picture of a hikers' procession. It is a mind boggling photo.
The information, analysis and opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment and opinions as of the date of writing and are subject to change at any time without notice. They are not intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice or a recommended course of action in any given situation.