|



From the Founder
Anti-Money Laundering
Forex Information
Excellence Award
Tips for healthy trading
FAQs (email)
Articles
Series Three Info
CTA and CPO info
NFA style Field Audits
IB & Branch setup
Consulting
Career Placement
Privacy Policy

Award page
Items you need to improve and protect your FCM or IB...
1.
Very important and useful forms and letters for
different applications for the FCM and the Introducing Broker. Visit our
"forms" page.
|
Good News For Income Investors
by
Steve Selengut
Looking for good news in today's markets
is like searching for the proverbial needle in a haystack. Needless to
say, practically all investment grade equities and nearly all closed end
funds that specialize in providing regular recurring monthly income have
been reduced in market value by this prolonged correction. The quake has
spread in all directions form its financial epicenter, and the mounting
doom and gloom has taken its toll on even the most rational investment
decision makers. Try to keep in mind that the purpose of income
investing is the income that your portfolio produces not an increase in
the securities' market values---
So here's the good news (and for anyone with a 40% or higher income
asset allocation, or an income portfolio being used for living
expenses), it really is very good news. Base income levels, from the
beginning of the stock market correction in June '07 until mid-July '08,
have barely changed at all. In fact, they have probably risen in
properly asset allocated portfolios. I have examined the regular
recurring monthly income distributed by 56 taxable income CEFs and 61
tax-free income CEFs, and the conclusions are pretty remarkable.
In spite of the fact that the vast majority of my favorite monthly
income producers are lower in market value than I would like, the amount
of income they are distributing to shareholders has not moved lower
meaningfully--- even though the Federal Reserve has reduced interest
rates by approximately 60% during the past twelve months. Here are the
numbers: (1) 48% of the taxable-income CEFs are distributing precisely
the same amount per share as they did a year ago. Fourteen issues have
increased their payouts and fifteen have reduced them.
The net result is a decrease of just fourteen cents (2.5% of the total
monthly payout). The average current yield on the portfolio, as of mid
July '07, is 9.86% without considering any capital gains distributions.
Additionally, the group is selling at market prices that reflect an
average discount of nearly 11% from NAV. Is that special or what? The
bonds, preferred stocks, government securities are priced 11% below
their current market values.
(2) The numbers are similar with regard to the 61 tax-free income CEFs:
46% have not altered their payout over the past twelve months; eighteen
have reduced their payout slightly, and 15 have increased the monthly
dole. The net difference for the group over the past year is less than
one cent, or a percentage change of two-tenths of one percent.
Remarkable. This group is selling at an average discount from NAV of
9.1% and has a current tax-free yield of 5.51%.
(3) Of 117 individual issues, about half have produced stable income.
The others have accounted for a total payout reduction of less than 15
cents--- a measly 1.7%. Why is this amount of little consequence? Two
reasons really.
First of all, a properly asset-allocated income portfolio does not
disburse all of the base income it receives, so there is income
available to reinvest in more shares of income producing securities.
This process assures a growing cash flow to calm your fear of rising
prices. The other reason is a bit more hypothetical. The Fed has lowered
rates significantly, a process that normally produces higher prices for
income securities. Eventually, those lower interest rates (even if
global pressures convince politicians to take back some of the
reductions) should produce higher prices (i.e., profit taking
opportunities) in these securities.
Admittedly, even if your asset allocation has been fine tuned for years,
lower portfolio market values in this area make stock market valuation
shrinkage feel even worse. But the value of stable cash flow becomes
painfully clear for investors who misguidedly depend on capital gains
for their spending money. Properly asset allocated portfolios contain
enough base income generators to pay the bills. The purpose of capital
gains is to produce proportionately more base income generators.
The purpose of this email is simply to bring some needed sunlight into
an investment environment that is far gloomier than I think it needs to
be. If you want the details, you'll have to request them personally.
Steve Selengut
800-245-0494
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.investmentmanagementbooks.com
Professional Portfolio Management since 1979
Author of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that
Wall Street Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's Secret
Investment Strategy"
NOTICE: Investment Reference does not recommend
or endorse any products, brokerage firms, CTAs, CPOs or representatives. All
material contained in any article is only the opinion of the person authoring the
article. Investment reference will publish any article submitted as a way of
offering a public forum and a means of exchanges of views and ideas. Investment
Reference also reserves the right to make the final decision on what to publish, and will
not publish anything that it considers offensive, slanderous, or fraudulent.
Investment Reference cannot and will not be held responsible for any information or
content in any articles except those which it authors itself.
Get in touch with us by
email.
THERE IS RISK OF LOSS IN TRADING
FUTURES... LOTS OF IT!!
Email us with questions or comments about
this website.
Copyright 1995 /2008 Investment Reference
Last modified:
July 19, 2008
|