Dear Clients & Friends,
We are now fully into 2019 and the general stock market has taken a pause from the aggressive selling. For now, at least the Standard & Poor 500 Index is modestly positive but we continue to focus on the defensive parts of the markets. For the fourth quarter of 2018 and into where we stand in 2019, it is generally accepted that the overall growth of earnings for the members of the Standard & Poor 500 Index will slow. However, there are plenty of investments that cannot only side-step much of the risk of the general stock market, but also pay you well. These sectors and stocks are not as reliant on ever – higher rates of earnings growth to successfully deliver positive returns for shareholders.
Real estate investment trusts (REITs) were one of the better success stories for investors last year and delivered a return of 12.54% even with the general market downdraft in the fourth quarter. REITs, of course, are not about fast-track growth, but steady asset appreciation and maximizing lease revenues for shareholders. REITs pay out the majority of their profits to shareholders without the double-taxation challenge of corporate taxes. In turn, individual investors get a tax break from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), which allows for a deduction of 20% of the dividends paid from their taxable income. With the average dividend yield for the index sitting at 4.42%, which is more than 2.13 times the yield of the Standard & Poor 500 Index, it is no wonder that this remains an ever-more-attractive sector with improving values and better dividend payouts. This is why we continue to own so many REITs in all of our portfolios.
Utilities are another sector that is showing strength. Like the REITs, last year started out with concerns over the impact of the TCJA on utilities’ profitability. But, as with REITS, investors figured out that the impact of the TCJA was not going to be as feared and interest rate spikes were not on the horizon.
Since June, utility stocks, as tracked by the Standard & Poor Utilities Index, have turned in a return of 11.65%. Utilities are not focused on aggressively driving earnings as much as steadily capitalizing on rising demand for essential services from a growing economy as efficiently as possible. And in turn, they generate ample cash flow that fuel dividends for shareholders. The average dividend yield for the Standard & Poor Utilities Index is sitting at 3.48% compared to 2.06% for the Standard & Poor 500 Index.
This does not mean that all we are buying are just a collection of REITs and utilities. There are plenty of other segments with positive returns including drug companies, reforming consumer goods and technology companies. But at the same time, with the general stock indexes coming under fire in the fourth quarter and into 2019, we are increasing the share of our dividend flows that come from investments that are more insulated from the general stock market. These investments are also more insulated from other indexes and index-linked funds, which will reduce the risk of volatility while paying us more while we own them.
Common stocks make up the vast majority of the stock market as well as our own portfolios. They represent equity in the underlying companies that issue them and rise and fall in price with the valuation and projections of success of those underlying companies. However, preferred shares of companies are a different kind of stock. They are issued by companies, typically with a fixed dividend paid quarterly. And while they do represent an interest in the companies’ assets and businesses, their price will tend to be more stable than for common stock, as they represent more of a debt of the company, much like a bond. Preferred stocks are much less widespread than common stocks, which is one of the reasons that make them attractive. Being less noticed than common stocks, preferred stocks tend to trade more under the radar of traders, and that makes them more ideal for individual investors that seek less volatility with more certainty of higher dividend payments. They also do not come with any voting rights, so they tend to move less with the value of the underlying business.
In addition, there are fewer indexes that track the market for preferred stocks and even those that do, do not necessarily fully reflect the broad variety of the shares. Instead, most of the indexes focus on banks and financial firms’ preferred stocks, which can distort the true attractiveness of many of the individual issues, however, they do continue to perform. Over the past five years, the Standard & Poor’s Preferred Stock Index has shown a total return of 28.97%, for an annual equivalent of 5.22%. We currently own the closed-end Flaherty + Crumrine Preferred Income Opportunity Fund (PFO) with its 7.15% dividend yield. With growth expectation for earnings slipping in the general common stock market, causing volatility and uncertainty in the market for common stocks, we added a trio of additional individual preferred stocks that will serve to provide us with higher income for the next couple of years until they become callable. We have also been adding another type of security called minibonds. With plenty of volatility and risk in the stock market, minibonds provide us with an excellent opportunity to gain greater income potential, while further reducing the overall volatility.
As far as our investment strategy is concerned, we continue to maintain our standard two-pronged strategy, which is to maintain a substantial exposure to common stocks (and mutual funds) as long as there is a reasonable prospect for double-digit returns. Furthermore, we continued with our average asset allocation mix of 40%-50% Equity, 40%-50% Fixed Income and 0%-20% cash for most of the portfolios. Since we have accumulated excessively high levels of cash in most of our portfolios, we decided to use some of that cash to increase our allocation of Fixed Income. We added several individual preferred stocks as well as preferred stock mutual funds. In addition, we upgraded our bond sector by adding minibonds to our portfolios. Minibonds, as the name implies, are bonds issued in small denomination. Traditional bonds are generally denominated in $1,000 face values. Minibonds are normally issued with face values of $25.00. Minibonds are listed on various stock exchanges, much like the preferred stocks. That makes it easier and more efficient for individual investors to buy and own them. Minibonds are a type of security that can be bought in nearly any sum, much like common stocks.
We want to thank all of you for giving our firm the opportunity to serve you. We thank you very much for the trust and confidence you have placed in our firm as it is always appreciated. Please contact us should you have any questions or comments.
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