Posts: 1,530
Threads: 172
Joined: Mar 2013
Reputation:
24
Anybody own or know anything about this one? A friend got turned on to it somehow, and asked my opinion. Small company, yielding 9.8 percent. I'd never heard of it and at first glance it looks like some kind of business services and financing company? Or something?
It's a BDC. I owned it until about a year ago and made good money on it but decided to get out of RICs. Seems to have similar performance to MAIN without the chronic overvaluation. I haven't followed it since I sold.
Posts: 6,404
Threads: 47
Joined: Aug 2018
Reputation:
63
I have owned it a lot the past five years. I do trim the runs when it gets way over NAV due to it's popularity. I think it is very high quality and diversified, but it gets hit with the stock market, rising rates or a scared bond market. Just makes it a tough buy and hold. My returns are outstanding but not if I just held it. MAIN is another excellent BDC. Trades just like ARCC. Buy it below NAV.
Posts: 1,683
Threads: 55
Joined: Oct 2020
Reputation:
5
When I retire, I plan to switch the ROTH IRA investments over to income generation, as follows:
Jan/April/July/October dividend - FSK
March/May/August/November dividend - HTGC (for some reason this one delays the Feb payment to March)
March/June/September/December dividend - ARCC
Will 100% of your ROTH IRA be invested in these 3 stocks?
Are you worried about dividend cuts and or no dividend raises from these 3 stocks?
Not trying to be a wet blanket, but I would be worried if I had all of my assets in these 3 stocks. I haven't researched these stocks so they might have raises in line with inflation and never had dividend cuts so these questions could be moot.
Posts: 1,683
Threads: 55
Joined: Oct 2020
Reputation:
5
My hope is that the ROTH IRA gets to around $300k by retirement. Then, with a yield averaging out to 10%, it gives me a nice $30k base that is tax-free.
There are other high yielders I could add; OMF and BXSL in particular I am interested in as well. I try to avoid high yielders that lose value over time, although FSK is down 10% in the past 5 years, but that's not bad.
Most of these don't raise dividends year after year in a linear fashion like traditional DGI, but for instance if you look at ARCC, it was paying $.38 in 2017 and now it is up to $.48. Still, dividend raises here aren't essential, as the yields are already very high. I'm more interested in capital preservation. Standard DGI with nice qualified dividends will come from the non-retirement brokerage account.