As with any investment, each must decide what their objectives are and what one feel good about.
Having said that I'd check very closely into the companies which make up the CEF. You don't get high yield without investing in high risk. All funds have fees and I imagine these are among the highest. Finally, I look closely at the distributions to ensure that ROC (return of Capital) is not what they may actually be giving you.
With my limited experience with closed end funds, the high payout was usually a return on capital. The actual dividend percent was low. Most of what I got was return on capital and not actual dividends. I personally have no use for CEFs at the present time. If I was much older and needed the income, I would look more closely into them.
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Rasec, check out low-risk-investing.com for total return figure with dividends reinvested. Looks like 6.9% per year for EVT. That page has been pretty accurate for my research...
Better than a sharp stick in the eye, but not anything to write home about.
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09-24-2015, 05:02 PM
(This post was last modified: 09-24-2015, 05:02 PM by Dividendsrule.)
Precisely. And if you want a more averaged breakdown of what happened year to year with your CEF, you can throw EVT into dividend-stocks.com. That shows you that there was a huge distribution cut followed by a freeze in 2009. It also shows you how the share price fluctuated, so even with high yields, it was wonky enough to give a poorer total return than the dividend stalwarts you mentioned above. For a young guy like yourself who has years to retirement (I am also young), I don't see any reason to hold CEFs for the long term.
My impressions is they can be effective trading vehicles (people do well buying them under NAV and selling when they hit or exceed NAV- I am completely uninterested in that strategy).
Closed-end funds issue a fixed number of shares which are listed on a stock exchange. They are expertly managed investment companies. Once released, the fund is not in the picture as for buying and selling of the shares. This is done in the open market. It views a variety of investment options like preferred stocks, common stocks, municipal bonds, high-yield bonds and foreign securities. The shares released are mostly common stocks.
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So now I have a big decision to make, EVT is getting close to my cost basis so I can opt to:
1) sell my entire position at cost and reinvest in a basket of stocks.
2) let it continue to pay the 9% in dividends every month (I can't lie, I love when the money lands) and DRIP.
3) let it continue to pay the 9% in dividends every month but not DRIP and use that cash somewhere else, my issue with this approach is that it will take time to compound an amount of cash large enough to be meaningful to reinvest in something else.