Given that the flavor of the month will soon be municipal bonds and associated instruments, I wanted to get ahead of the curve and post a few options for investors who want to partake in a potentially safer way to achieve high yields than banking on a quarterly dividend that may be reduced at any time or a wildly fluctuating share price. There are some especially nice instruments (closed-end funds) that save you the time and effort of individually purchasing the bonds yourself.
What makes municipal bond closed-end funds attractive?
- The most important aspect in my opinion is the risk-adjusted return at this point. Several prominent investors are citing this time as the most attractive time to be purchasing munis in recent history given the spread over treasuries. One might ask why the high premium per lower than commensurate risk? It's the lack of liquidity in the market. These bonds are highly unlikely to default, they're diverse and the yields are likely to decline in the future once liquidity returns to the market.
- CDs, money markets and savings yields are all dropping to pathetic levels. Treasuries are now yielding negative when accounting for inflation.
- The ones I cite here pay dividends monthly, and have done so on a consistent basis for years.
- The owner pays no federal tax on the dividend payments. Roughly, holding a 6% closed end muni fund is equivalent to holding an 8% high yield stock, but without the same risk and the added benefit of non-correlated returns on the underlying asset value.
I've listed a couple states here to chose from:
BlackRock New Jersey Municipal Bond Trust (BLJ) - yielding 6.04% and has been paying the same, steady yield for over 5 years.
BlackRock California Municipal Income Trust (BFZ) - yielding 6.10% and again, has been paying the same, steady yield for over 5 years.
PIMCO Municipal Income Fund (PMF) - yielding 6.34% and again, has been paying the same, steady yield for over 5 years.
What are the risks?
- For one, states have been paying their employees to live off the public largess for years and there may come a time when full pensions after 20 years of work is no longer a sustainable model. Conversely, states do not hesitate to raise taxes either; PA and NJ have recently passed sales tax increases and the municipality I live in randomly started a 1% local income tax.
- The share price could continue to decline and if you're looking to sell, you may do so at a loss. I would envision buying these instruments and holding for years as opposed to trading.
- Do your own research, of course and perhaps buy more than 1 of these in multiple states if you're investing a significant sum.
If you're interested in higher yielding stocks in diverse industries from commodities to international investment, feel free to visit my recent post on my self-directed IRA holdings.











6 COMMENTS HERE
These funds are all trading at fairly significant premiums to NAV.
I looked at the PIMCO CEF you mentioned, and it is trading at a massive 20+% premium to NAV.
I think I'll stick with my Vanguard Muni funds.
What is NAV?
Net Average Value. That's something that differentiates these closed end funds from open ended or traditional funds (and stocks).
Essentially, they can trade at a discount or a premium to the value of the underlying assets. The concern over a fund trading at a premium of 20% is that if the fund returns to parity over time, you'll see a decrease in the price of 20%.
Here are a few thoughts on that...
1) True - generally, investors seek to pick up funds trading at a discount, not a premium.
2) However, what's to say the value of the underlying assets isn't going to increase to align more with the current trading price? After all, it's market forces that brought the price to the premium it's at now. Perhaps the smart money knows the risk-reward ratio is appealing?
3) Next, if I plan on holding for several years and the dividend payouts remain steady as they have for several years, it's the dividend cash flows that I bought it for. If I sell it in 5 years for the same price, I was still making 6.4% per year; decent given the risk and diversification.
I'd recommend doing your research, diversifying, even within the muni funds out there and don't fall asleep at the wheel. Buy and hold without periodic review/scrutiny is no longer the most prudent way to invest.
not only are these high-premium ETFs, you need to add the additional risk of a potential BlackRock failure. after Bear's implosion it is foolish to discount this possibility.
oh and if case anyone's noticed, munis are heading towards a bit of hurt.
if you are concerned with preservation of capital, stick with Treasuries til this whole mess settles down. at least that's what I'm doing.
Check out Gdocf.pk / Gogl.ol (Golden Ocean Group Limited) if you like high yields. This company have paid 0.8 the last two quarters and is trading around 5. Ceo indicated 1.5 likely for 2008, and so far 1 for 2009.
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