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Wealth Beat News > Investing > Debt-Ceiling Fight Could Drive This 7% Dividend Higher
Investing

Debt-Ceiling Fight Could Drive This 7% Dividend Higher

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Last updated: 2023/05/26 at 2:33 PM
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There’s a lot of rhetoric flying around about the debt ceiling these days, and it’s set up a very nice opportunity for us to buy a 7%-yielding closed-end fund (CEF) we always have on our watch list.

That would be the Nuveen Nasdaq 100 Dynamic Overwrite Fund (QQQX).

A good way to think of QQQX is like a NASDAQ index fund but with higher dividends and a smart way to turn volatility into extra dividend cash. I say QQQX is like a NASDAQ index fund because its holdings mirror those of the Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ), including all the big-cap techs we all know well:

QQQX, like QQQ, tracks the NASDAQ 100, so it’s no surprise that you’ll see great tech firms in its portfolio. Plus, QQQX does something pretty special: it sells call options on its portfolio, both as a form of insurance and as a way to generate extra income.

Since QQQX owns $1.2 billion worth of stocks, it can sell options on its portfolio that can generate around 2% to 3% of its asset value in the form of cash premiums paid to the fund by option buyers. QQQX then hands that cash to shareholders as dividends.

Of course, QQQX’s yield is more than 3%. More than double that, in fact, because the fund also gets about a 0.8% dividend yield from its holdings. It supplies the rest of its total return (including the rest of its dividend) with capital gains from its portfolio.

The fund’s option strategy does well when volatility ticks up—and volatility could be poised to do just that in the coming weeks, with the debt ceiling adding to investor worries.

The Debt-Ceiling Scare

The last time the US Congress flirted with defaulting on debt was in 2011, and the stock market was not happy.

In 2011, stocks failed to rise, despite a good start to the year and despite the recovery that was already in force, both in the economy and the stock market after the Great Recession. Congress stymied that momentum, and it’s easy to see from the chart when that happened—although Congress did eventually pass a last-minute deal.

Fast-forward to this year and we have not seen the same phenomenon play out in the markets—yet. That’s because this time markets have realized Congress’s political wrangling about the debt ceiling is just that: political. Last-minute deals, worrying warnings of a default and overheated rhetoric from both sides are all part of the game around the debt ceiling.

In 2011, markets were fragile after the subprime mortgage crisis, and movements like Occupy Wall Street added to the insecurity. These days, markets are more in tune with the fact that Congress likes to inflame the fear surrounding the debt ceiling. So I don’t see markets taking a serious tumble from here. But even so, more volatility is likely between now and when a deal is inevitably signed.

That’s our in with QQQX, which effectively turns that volatility into cash, while getting us exposure to some of the strongest tech stocks to hold for long-term gains.

Michael Foster is the Lead Research Analyst for Contrarian Outlook. For more great income ideas, click here for our latest report “Indestructible Income: 5 Bargain Funds with Steady 10.4% Dividends.”

Disclosure: none

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News May 26, 2023 May 26, 2023
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