3 Great Retirement Investments (and 2 Ticking Time Bombs to Avoid) – Contrarian Outlook (2024)

Brett Owens, Chief Investment Strategist
Updated: December 28, 2018

Today we’re going to talk about the single biggest risk you face in your golden years.

But don’t worry—I’ll also show you how to clobber that risk and set yourself up for an easy $40,000 in cash in every year of your retirement. More on that below.

First, the risk I’m talking about is the very real chance you’ll outlive your nest egg. Because a sweeping study says you could be very wrong about the length of your retirement.

A Hidden Danger

Here’s what the numbers say: in 1992, the University of Michigan asked 26,000 Americans 50 years of age and older how long they thought they’d live. The results, collected 25 years later, are staggering.

When first asked, 7% of participants said they had zero chance of making it to 75. But despite their pessimism, 49.2% did just that. Of the folks who gave themselves a 50/50 shot, 75% went on to do so.

So now might be a good time to rethink your expectation of how long you’ll live—because you’ll likely be around a lot longer!

Don’t Buy Wall Street’s Retirement “Solution”

Here’s where Wall Street comes in, with a “solution” only it could cook up.

It’s called the 4% withdrawal rule, and it recommends supplementing your dividend income by withdrawing 4% from your capital every year in retirement.

Trouble is, every few years you get a situation like this:

The 4% Plan’s Fatal Flaw
3 Great Retirement Investments (and 2 Ticking Time Bombs to Avoid) – Contrarian Outlook (1)

In fact, we’re seeing one right now due to the market’s sharp selloff! Any retirees holding Microsoft (MSFT) in late ’08 or ’18 are withdrawing money at exactly the wrong time. Microsoft’s dividend is fine, but if you need income, you must sell even more shares with the price low.

Remember dollar-cost averaging, which you may have used to build your nest egg? This is the same phenomenon but in reverse! In this scenario,you’re selling more shares when prices are low and fewer when prices are high.

It’s a straight path to prematurely running down your savings. And it pains me that so many folks take it as gospel.

But don’t despair, because there’s an easy solution: build a retirement portfolio with an outsized dividend yield. I’m talking an 8% average payout or better. That’s enough to live on dividends alone with as little as $500,000 saved up.

I’ll show you the two asset classes (and three specific buys) that can get you there just a little further on.

But bear with me, because before we build our high-yield retirement portfolio, we need to purge our nest egg of the “sacred cows” that look safe but actually drain your returns—including these two:

Fixed Income

As I write, 10-Year Treasuries yield 3%. You could get a similar rate from a CD … if you lock away your cash for five years.

That’s a lot to ask for 3%. And this is the definition of “dead money,” because you’ll get no capital gains, just your cash back after the five years is up.

This may sound safe, but inflation will eat most of that 3%, leaving you right back where you started. And if you did try to retire on it, you’d need to invest $1.5 million to drive a $40,000 yearly income stream. That’s just not realistic for most folks.

Dividend Aristocrats

You’ve probably heard of these 50 companies, which have raised their dividends annually for 25 years. Some of America’s best-known firms make the cut, like Walmart (WMT), 3M (MMM) and McDonald’s (MCD).

And the truth is, there are some solid picks among the so-called aristocracy. But the average Dividend Aristocrat, as measured by the ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats ETF (NOBL), pays even less than the 10-Year: just 2.5%! So you’d need north of $1.6 million to get our theoretical $40,000 income stream.

Worse, your average Aristocrat hasn’t even beaten the S&P 500 over the 4 years since NOBL was launched—even when you include dividends.

Aristocrats Humbled
3 Great Retirement Investments (and 2 Ticking Time Bombs to Avoid) – Contrarian Outlook (2)

Sure, a 72% return in five years isn’t bad, but it’s still disappointing, because dividend growth is the No. 1 driver of share prices, so these companies should have a built-in edge over your typical S&P 500 name.

A big reason why the Aristocrats don’t gain from their dividend-growth edge is that too many, like Colgate-Palmolive (CL), churn out meager one- or two-cent yearly hikes just to stay in the club, and that’s not enough to tempt income-starved investors.

We need to do better. Which brings me to…

Your 3 Retirement Lifeboats

The good news is that topping the popular choices is easy. We just need to go where first-level investors aren’t, starting with…

Closed-End Funds (1 Buy)

Here’s something most folks don’t know: you can double your dividend payouts (or better) by switching from the average S&P 500 stock to a closed-end fund (CEF). (If you’re not familiar with these wonderful income plays, many of which pay 8%+ dividends, click here for a quick primer.)

And you can often shift from stocks to CEFs without even switching investments!

Here’s what I mean; if you own, say, MasterCard (MA) or Honeywell International (HON), you can “trade in” their payouts (0.7% and 2.6%, respectively) for a 7.8% dividend from the Gabelli Dividend & Income Trust (GDV), which has both stocks in its top 10 holdings.

Better still, GDV trades at a totally unusual 11.4% discount to net asset value (NAV, or what its underlying portfolio is actually worth). That bakes in some nice price upside and makes the dividend safer, because fund manager Mario Gabelli only has to earn 6.8% of GDV’s NAV—not the 7.8% yield on market price—to keep its payouts humming along—and that’s a much easier return to get, especially for a seasoned vet like him.

Real Estate Investment Trusts (2 Buys)

REITs—owners of properties ranging from apartments to self-storage units—don’t pay income taxes so long as they hand over most of their earnings to shareholders.

That means bigger dividend checks for us!

REIT Buy No. 1: A Growing 5.5% Dividend From Aging Boomers

For a high-yield REIT, look to healthcare landlord Ventas (VTR): it pays a market-busting 5.5% dividend yield now—and that dividend is safe, thanks to Ventas’s low (for a REIT) payout ratio of 75% of funds from operations (FFO; the REIT equivalent of earnings per share).

Better yet, due to overdone interest-rate fears (which are now much less of a concern than they were a few weeks ago), Ventas is cheap today, at just 15-times FFO!

REIT Buy No. 2: A One-Stop Shop for 9.7% Dividends Paid Monthly

Finally, you can get the best of both REITs and CEFs by picking up a closed-end fund that owns REITs, like the Cohen & Steers Quality Income Realty Fund (RQI).

RQI holds some of the top REITs in the space, including apartment landlord Essex Property Trust (ESS), cell-tower owner Crown Castle International (CCL) and data-center operator Equinix (EQIX).

As you can see, its portfolio is nicely diversified across the space, so you’ve got some protection if one particular segment runs into difficulty:

3 Great Retirement Investments (and 2 Ticking Time Bombs to Avoid) – Contrarian Outlook (3)
Source: Cohen & Steers September 30, 2018, fact sheet

Management firm Cohen & Steers has been around since 1986, and its team takes the outsized dividends REITs already pay, adds in these stocks’ price gains and tops things off with a conservative amount of leverage (around 24% of the portfolio) to hand us a huge 9.7% dividend that rolls in every month like clockwork:

A Predictable 9.7% Payout
3 Great Retirement Investments (and 2 Ticking Time Bombs to Avoid) – Contrarian Outlook (4)
Source: CEFConnect.com

And in case you’re wondering, this team knows how to spot bargains in REIT land: check out how RQI dominated the go-to REIT benchmark Vanguard Real Estate ETF (VNQ) in the last decade:

A Proven Performer
3 Great Retirement Investments (and 2 Ticking Time Bombs to Avoid) – Contrarian Outlook (5)

The best time to buy is right now: as I write, RQI trades at a ridiculous 11.8% discount to NAV, and it’s traded at an almost nonexistent 0.5% discount in the past year. That sets the table for 12.9% price upside as RQI’s discount moves back to that level.

So what’s the bottom line on these three rock-solid income plays? Throw them all together in their own little “mini-portfolio” and you’ve got an average yield of 7.6%—enough to hand you $40,000 of yearly income on a $525,000 upfront investment.

But we’re not stopping there! Because the safest strategy is to take just one more step and …

Make a $500,000 Nest Egg Last Forever

What if I told you that you could kick-start that same $40,000 income stream with much less cash—$100,000 less, to be exact?

That’s right: $40,000 of income every year on just a $500,000 nest egg.

And you’ll be getting a lot more diversification, too, because what I’m about to show you will spread your cash out over six rock-solid investments instead of just three (and yes, this dynamic “six-pack” includes CEFs and REITs, plus other too-often-ignored income plays, like preferred shares).

The key is my 8% “No-Withdrawal” retirement portfolio, which I’ve custom-built to protect your nest egg in a downturn and deliver an 8% average dividend all the time, easily enough to hand us $40,000 a year on just $500,000 in savings!

Best of all, you won’t have to worry about outliving your cash, because unlike Wall Street’s deadly 4% plan, you won’t have to draw a single penny of your capital in retirement!

I’m ready to share all the details with you now. CLICK HERE and I’ll give you my full strategy, plus the names and ticker symbols of each of the 6 winning income plays inside this portfolio.

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Susan had a larger balance at the age of 65 because she began saving at the age of 25 and continued for ten years, giving her investments 40 years to increase. 4. What important piece of information is missing from this graph? An important piece of information that is missing from the graph is what they invested in 5.

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5 days ago

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About 11 months ago, Tuttle Capital Management launched the Inverse Cramer Tracker ETF (SJIM), an attempt to capitalise on Cramer's reputation as a lousy stock picker. SJIM started along with the Long Cramer Tracker (LJIM), which took the opposite strategy as SJIM – betting on the stocks that Cramer recommended.

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Some investors have made fortunes through what appear to be superior analytical skills. Household names like Peter Lynch and Warren Buffett achieved their successes by picking individual stocks. Many individuals you've never heard of have attempted similar strategies and failed.

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