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3 ‘Secret' Income Plays Throwing Off Huge 7.5%+ Dividend Yields

3 ‘Secret' Income Plays Throwing Off Huge 7.5%+ Dividend Yields

Forbesa day ago

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I'm just going to come out and say it: If you want to be financially independent (and who doesn't?), you must own closed-end funds (CEFs).
For those 'in the know' about CEFs, the reason is simple: massive yields. As I write, closed-end funds yield 9.1% on average. And game-changing dividends like that are only one way CEFs reward us—and I'd argue they're not even the best one!
The best-in-class CEFs out there—and here I'd definitely include the three we're going to get into below—also offer strong total returns, with price gains and dividends combining to hand us overall returns of 10%+ yearly.
And with CEFs, we get a solid indication of when those returns may start to build. It's an easy-to-find indicator called the discount to net asset value (NAV).
This discount stems from a key difference between CEFs and ETFs: CEFs can't issue new shares to new investors post-IPO, so their market prices are often different (and regularly lower) than their per-share portfolio values (their NAV, in other words).
So if, say, you buy a CEF with a 10% discount, you're buying its portfolio for 10% less than you could if you bought its holdings on the open market.
This sets up a nice 'rinse-and-repeat' cycle for us: We buy a discounted CEF, collect its huge income stream, then sell at a premium down the road.
Of course, these kinds of opportunities don't tend to last, and in the last year we've seen more CEFs trade at smaller discounts as investors start to clue in. But investors are focusing very tightly on quality here, given recent uncertainty. That's got them zeroing in on only those CEFs with strong track records.
There are, however, some gems that have been left behind. Let's look at three.
First up is the Eaton Vance Tax-Advantaged Global Dividend Opportunities Fund (ETO), which should attract a fat premium given the interest in global stocks these days. Yet ETO, with a mix of American mega-caps like NVIDIA (NVDA) and foreign powerhouses like AstraZeneca (AZN), trades at a fat 8.7% discount today. That's despite its generous 7.9% dividend, which should be getting more attention. So, by the way, should the fund's performance.
ETO Total Returns
Beyond the discount and dividend, ETO's 12.3% annualized return on NAV (orange line above) should also be a shiny lure for investors. But as you can see, ETO's market price–based total return (in purple) has lagged, inflating its discount from where it was a half-decade ago.
That's clearly an error on the market's part, and it makes ETO well worth a look today.
We'll find an even bigger discrepancy with the Eaton Vance Tax-Managed Buy-Write Income Fund (ETB), a 9.1%-yielder holding S&P 500 mainstays like Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT), NVIDIA (NVDA), Amazon.com (AMZN) and Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A).
This high-powered roster should put ETB on investors' radar, yet the gap between its total NAV return (in orange below) and total price return (in purple) is huge.
ETB Total Returns
With a 11.3% annualized return over the last half-decade (based on NAV), ETB's managers have clearly done their job. Yet investors have taken little notice, causing its market price–based return to lag, and its discount to widen to 7.8%.
Completing the picture is the fact that ETB has averaged a 1.7% premium in the last decade. That gives it plenty of upside as its overdone discount flips to the fund's 'normal' premium.
Finally, consider the John Hancock Financial Opportunities Fund (BTO), which subscribers to my CEF Insider service might remember. We've held BTO twice in the past and have booked nice double-digit total returns both times.
BTO, which yields 7.5%, focuses on the financial sector, mainly banking firms, with M&T Bank (MTB), Mississippi-based Renasant Corp. (RNST) and US Bancorp (USB) all top holdings.
BTO Total Returns
These stocks have given BTO a sprightly 18.4% annualized return on NAV (in purple above) in the last five years. Yet its NAV return is only slightly ahead of its market price–based return (in purple). This shows that investors are hesitant to sharply bid up the fund.
This is an interesting chart: BTO is priced at a 5.5% premium currently, which sounds pricey but is actually a deal given the fund's long-term trend, which includes a premium that's hit double digits several times in the last decade.
Investors have picked up on this, which is why BTO's pricing went from around par earlier this year to today's premium. Expect that premium to keep growing, especially if the stock market keeps rising, as well.
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% Dividends.'
Disclosure: none

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Sometimes, the best business decision is to change businesses
Sometimes, the best business decision is to change businesses

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time12 minutes ago

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Sometimes, the best business decision is to change businesses

A version of this post first appeared on When you use fundamental analysis to estimate the value of a stock, you have to make a lot of projections. How quickly will the sales grow? Will profit margins expand or contract? What will the company's capital structure look like, and where will interest rates go? Where will tax rates be in the future? If the projections you put into your valuation model are off, then the value you calculate will be off. Analysts call this phenomenon "garbage in, garbage out." To demonstrate how difficult this exercise is, let's try projecting the sales for A1 Widgets Corporation, a hypothetical company that's the worldwide leader in selling indestructible widgets. Based on A1's order book, sales for widgets will grow for exactly five years. In the fifth year, everyone in the world who will ever need a widget will have one. From there, there will be no more demand for widgets, and the widget factories will close. What will A1's sales look like after the fifth year? If you said $0, then you'd be wrong. Because A1's owners and management had the foresight to quietly gain a foothold in the emerging cloud infrastructure and AI technology businesses. As a result, the company will soon see more sales and growth than ever before. Earnings will eclipse what they made selling widgets. And the stock price will explode. No, this was not a trick question. There are countless examples of companies expanding into or outright pivoting to businesses that no one could've foreseen. Having a great product to sell isn't enough to have a business that'll generate a great return for shareholders for many years to come. You also must have stellar management with a killer instinct for allocating capital. Not only does management have to figure out how to sell the company's core product for growth and profitability, but they also have to be able to read the tea leaves and recognize when the tides of business are turning. Maybe the market for the product is saturated. Maybe the product is becoming obsolete. Maybe customer preferences are shifting with technological developments. Maybe there are other significant opportunities to pursue, and the company has both the finances and expertise to capitalize on them. Most companies continually make subtle adjustments that often go largely unnoticed. Some completely overhaul their business. Take Berkshire Hathaway, which was a textile company when Warren Buffett took over it in 1965. Not long after, Berkshire became an insurance company that also sold candy. Today, it's a diversified conglomerate selling everything from energy to airplane parts to underwear. And it has a massive stock portfolio generating market-beating returns. (I discussed Berkshire's culture of change in a recent appearance on Yahoo Finance.) Another famous example of a company that's undergone a total transformation is Netflix. The company defined change when it introduced DVD rentals by mail while many consumers were still walking the aisles of brick-and-mortar video stores. While it dominated the mail-based rental business, management quickly shifted its efforts and aggressively invested in streaming services and original content. In 2023, Netflix mailed its last DVD. The stock currently trades at an all-time high, with the company valued at over $500 billion. Last week, I was on Yahoo Finance's "Stocks in Translation" podcast with Jared Blikre and Sydnee Fried (video above). Jared brought up Apple, which generated $96 billion in sales from services. Here's what I said about Apple during our discussion: If we were having a conversation about valuations 25 years ago when Apple was only making desktop computers, [you would ask] how many computers can they sell before you hit a ceiling? And so if you're only thinking about investing in a company that only makes computers, then yeah, it might not make sense to pay a premium on the stock that you're buying. But if you can be a little bit more imaginative, and if you understand that this is a company that understands change and tweaks its business model as the world changes, and as it reaches a saturation point, then you can begin to imagine a path where a company can continue grow earnings like Apple has and turn into a multi-trillion dollar company. Apple's Mac computers account for less than a tenth of the company's sales. Meanwhile, phones, a category they didn't get into until 2007, account for about half of sales. Services account for about a quarter of sales. Acknowledging that your best product has matured and may be on a path to obsolescence is a tough pill to swallow. That said, once you've come to this realization, the hard part is likely just beginning. Those leading the change will inevitably be met with resistance, not just outside the company, but also inside the company, where many employees won't be ready to let go of the old way of doing things. Even assuming you have the full buy-in of the company, who knows if you're pivoting in the right direction? You very well could be trading one failing business for another that's doomed to go sideways. Of course, even the most successful companies have made many bets that have gone bad. The difference between companies that can and can't move past these failures is great risk management and the confidence of shareholders. But if you fail enough times, you'll eventually lose the faith of the shareholders. No one ever said any of this was easy. Every publicly traded company is doing everything it can to make sure earnings will grow, perhaps in a way that leads to market-beating returns in the company's stock price. But many disappoint. Unfortunately, there isn't a surefire way to identify winners consistently enough that you can build a portfolio that outperforms the market. One of the reasons for this is that over time, it's a minority of stocks with massive returns driving the market's performance. So, how can investors play this? Historically, one of the best moves has been to buy broadly diversified index funds like those tracking the S&P 500. While the diversification may limit your upside, it also makes it almost certain that you'll have exposure to the big winners, including the companies that successfully pivot their businesses in ways that create massive amounts of shareholder value. The evolution of many companies isn't too dissimilar from the ups and downs many of us face in our lives. As I recently shared with Joe Fahmy on his podcast, my entry to writing about markets was anything but planned and orderly. And over the span of my career, I experienced at least six major pay cuts, including one big one that occurred after I got laid off. Few of us are lucky enough to live a life where everything goes up and to the right in a smooth, straight line. But most of us are on a non-linear path, whether by choice or because of forces outside our control. The good news is that just because things don't go as planned doesn't mean we're doomed to spiral. Read enough biographies (and business case studies), and you'll eventually see that the most impressive people (and companies) were the ones who had to overcome many challenges by making big, unplanned changes. Just a thought. There were several notable data points and macroeconomic developments since our last review: 👍 Inflation cools. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) in May was up 2.4% from a year ago. Adjusted for food and energy prices, core CPI was up 2.8%, unchanged from the prior month's level. On a month-over-month basis, CPI and core CPI increased just 0.1%. If you annualize the three-month trend in the monthly figures — a reflection of the short-term trend in prices — core CPI climbed 1.7%. For more on inflation, read: 🎈and ✂️ 👍 Inflation expectations cooled. From the New York Fed's May Survey of Consumer Expectations: "Median inflation expectations decreased at all three horizons in May. One-year-ahead inflation expectations declined by 0.4 percentage point to 3.2%, three-year-ahead inflation expectations declined by 0.2 percentage point to 3.0%, and five-year-ahead inflation expectations declined by 0.1 percentage point to 2.6%." The introduction of new tariffs risks higher inflation. For more, read: 😬 👍 Consumer sentiment improves. From the University of Michigan's June Surveys of Consumers: "Consumer sentiment improved for the first time in six months, climbing 16% from last month but remaining about 20% below December 2024, when sentiment had exhibited a post-election bump. These trends were unanimous across the distributions of age, income, wealth, political party, and geographic region. Moreover, all five index components rose, with a particularly steep increase for short and long-run expected business conditions, consistent with a perceived easing of pressures from tariffs." Relatively weak consumer sentiment readings appear to contradict resilient consumer spending data. For more on this contradiction, read: 🙊 and 🛫 🤑 Wage growth is cool. According to the Atlanta Fed's wage growth tracker, the median hourly pay in May was up 4.3% from the prior year, unchanged from April's level. For more on why policymakers are watching wage growth, read: 📈 💼 Unemployment claims hold steady. Initial claims for unemployment benefits stood at 248,000 during the week ending June 7, unchanged from the week prior. This remains at a level historically associated with economic growth. For more context, read: 🏛️ and 💼 💳 Card spending data is holding up. From JPMorgan: "As of 06 Jun 2025, our Chase Consumer Card spending data (unadjusted) was 2.7% above the same day last year. Based on the Chase Consumer Card data through 06 Jun 2025, our estimate of the US Census May control measure of retail sales m/m is 0.45%." From BofA: "Total BAC card spending per HH was up 0.8% y/y in May. We forecast flat readings for both ex-auto & control group retail sales. Favorable seasonal factors offset a weak reading on m/m spending growth from the BAC card data." For more on consumer spending, read: 😵‍💫 and 🛍️ 🏠 Mortgage rates tick lower. According to Freddie Mac, the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage declined to 6.84%, down from 6.85% last week. From Freddie Mac: "Mortgage rates have moved within a narrow range for the past few months and this week is no different. Rate stability, improving inventory and slower house price growth are an encouraging combination this National Homeownership Month." There are 147.8 million housing units in the U.S., of which 86.1 million are owner-occupied and about 34.1 million are mortgage-free. Of those carrying mortgage debt, almost all have fixed-rate mortgages, and most of those mortgages have rates that were locked in before rates surged from 2021 lows. All of this is to say: Most homeowners are not particularly sensitive to movements in home prices or mortgage rates. For more on mortgages and home prices, read: 😖 👍 Small business optimism improves. From the NFIB's May Small Business Optimism Index report: "Although optimism recovered slightly in May, uncertainty is still high among small business owners. While the economy will continue to stumble along until the major sources of uncertainty are resolved, owners reported more positive expectations on business conditions and sales growth." For more on the state of sentiment, read: 📊 and 😵‍💫 🍾 The entrepreneurial spirit remains elevated. From the Census Bureau: "Total U.S. Business Applications were 446,993 in May 2025, down 0.6% from April 2025." TKer is a small business that launched a little over three years ago. For more, read: 📈🎂 📦 Inventory levels are stable. Wholesale inventories increased 0.2% in April to $908.7 billion. The inventories/sales ratio held steady at 1.30. For more on why we're watching inventories, read: 🤷🏻‍♂️ 👋 Job switchers usually switch careers. From Indeed: "Between 2022 and 2024, about 2.6% of Indeed users switched to new jobs every month, and 64% of those job switchers also changed occupations." 🏢 Offices remain relatively empty. From Kastle Systems: "Peak day office occupancy was 64.2% on Tuesday last week, a new post-pandemic record high, up nearly four full points from the previous week. Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles experienced record high Tuesday occupancy, up 6.4 points to 64.1% and 5.2 points to 59.1%, respectively. The average low was on Friday at 35.5%, up nearly five full points from the previous week." For more on office occupancy, read: 🏢 📈 Near-term GDP growth estimates are tracking positive. The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow model sees real GDP growth rising at a 3.8% rate in Q2. For more on GDP and the economy, read: 📉 and 🚨 The Trump administration's pursuit of tariffs threatens to disrupt global trade, with significant implications for the U.S. economy, corporate earnings, and the stock market. Until we get more clarity, here's where things stand: Earnings look bullish: The long-term outlook for the stock market remains favorable, bolstered by expectations for years of earnings growth. And earnings are the most important driver of stock prices. Demand is positive: Demand for goods and services remains positive, supported by healthy consumer and business balance sheets. Job creation, while cooling, also remains positive, and the Federal Reserve — having resolved the inflation crisis — has shifted its focus toward supporting the labor market. But growth is cooling: While the economy remains healthy, growth has normalized from much hotter levels earlier in the cycle. The economy is less "coiled" these days as major tailwinds like excess job openings and core capex orders have faded. It has become harder to argue that growth is destiny. Actions speak louder than words: We are in an odd period, given that the hard economic data has decoupled from the soft sentiment-oriented data. Consumer and business sentiment has been relatively poor, even as tangible consumer and business activity continues to grow and trend at record levels. From an investor's perspective, what matters is that the hard economic data continues to hold up. Stocks are not the economy: Analysts expect the U.S. stock market could outperform the U.S. economy, thanks largely due to positive operating leverage. Since the pandemic, companies have adjusted their cost structures aggressively. This has come with strategic layoffs and investment in new equipment, including hardware powered by AI. These moves are resulting in positive operating leverage, which means a modest amount of sales growth — in the cooling economy — is translating to robust earnings growth. Mind the ever-present risks: Of course, this does not mean we should get complacent. There will always be risks to worry about — such as U.S. political uncertainty, geopolitical turmoil, energy price volatility, cyber attacks, etc. There are also the dreaded unknowns. Any of these risks can flare up and spark short-term volatility in the markets. Investing is never a smooth ride: There's also the harsh reality that economic recessions and bear markets are developments that all long-term investors should expect to experience as they build wealth in the markets. Always keep your stock market seat belts fastened. Think long-term: For now, there's no reason to believe there'll be a challenge that the economy and the markets won't be able to overcome over time. The long game remains undefeated, and it's a streak long-term investors can expect to continue. A version of this post first appeared on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Dave Ramsey Tells The Caller, 'Bump Him On The Head, Girl,' Warns Against Letting A 22-Year-Old Son Move In Without Paying What He Owes
Dave Ramsey Tells The Caller, 'Bump Him On The Head, Girl,' Warns Against Letting A 22-Year-Old Son Move In Without Paying What He Owes

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Dave Ramsey Tells The Caller, 'Bump Him On The Head, Girl,' Warns Against Letting A 22-Year-Old Son Move In Without Paying What He Owes

A mother recently called into 'The Ramsey Show' to get advice about her 22-year-old son, and Dave Ramsey did not hold back. Her son, who is graduating debt-free from college this month thanks to the 'sacrifice' of his parents, racked up a $700 urgent care bill after ignoring his parents' advice to use the on-campus clinic. The parents paid $500 of the bill and asked him to pay the remaining $200 to teach him some financial responsibility. But the son flat-out refused. Don't Miss: Maker of the $60,000 foldable home has 3 factory buildings, 600+ houses built, and big plans to solve housing — Inspired by Uber and Airbnb – Deloitte's fastest-growing software company is transforming 7 billion smartphones into income-generating assets – The caller explained that her son planned to move back home for the summer while completing an internship. "No way. There's consequences to being a butt," Ramsey said. "He doesn't get to live there rent-free if he doesn't pay a bill because it's your responsibility when it's not." The mom said her son believes the parents should cover the entire bill since he's still on their health plan. But Ramsey and his co-host Ken Coleman weren't having it. "You're not going to move in here until you pay that bill," Ramsey continued. "I'll let you live here rent-free to get a good start, not for being an entitled brat." Coleman got especially fired up when the mom mentioned that she was planning to play the clip of the call to her son. Talking directly to him, he said, "Dude, you need a reality check. You ought to be apologizing to your parents and groveling all over yourself in gratitude for all they've done for you," he said. "You went to a place that I told you not to. You've got a $700 problem. It's not Mom and I's problem." Trending: Invest where it hurts — and help millions heal:. 'If you're big enough to get yourself in this mess, you're big enough to get yourself [out],' Ramsey added. Ramsey then pivoted to a broader message: Gratitude and humility must be taught early. "Everything when you're parenting is a muscle that must be built," he said. "Gratitude leads to and helps you as it grows inside a child. A grateful child becomes a humble child." He explained that these traits, once deeply rooted, shape adults who understand the value of personal responsibility, appreciate the support they've been given, and recognize that respect and opportunity must be earned, not expected or demanded. Such individuals are more likely to approach challenges with humility, make thoughtful financial choices, and avoid placing undue expectations on others. Read Next: Maximize saving for your retirement and cut down on taxes: . The average American couple has saved this much money for retirement —?UNLOCKED: 5 NEW TRADES EVERY WEEK. Click now to get top trade ideas daily, plus unlimited access to cutting-edge tools and strategies to gain an edge in the markets. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? APPLE (AAPL): Free Stock Analysis Report TESLA (TSLA): Free Stock Analysis Report This article Dave Ramsey Tells The Caller, 'Bump Him On The Head, Girl,' Warns Against Letting A 22-Year-Old Son Move In Without Paying What He Owes originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

IonQ, Inc. (IONQ): NVIDIA CEO Is Giving A Green Light, Says Jim Cramer
IonQ, Inc. (IONQ): NVIDIA CEO Is Giving A Green Light, Says Jim Cramer

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time15 minutes ago

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IonQ, Inc. (IONQ): NVIDIA CEO Is Giving A Green Light, Says Jim Cramer

We recently published a list of . In this article, we are going to take a look at where IonQ, Inc. (NYSE:IONQ) stands against other stocks that Jim Cramer discusses. IonQ, Inc. (NYSE:IONQ) is one of the few pure-play American quantum computing hardware companies. The firm was a regular feature of Cramer's appearances earlier this year in January. Back then, the quantum computing sector was basking in the glory of Google's announcement that its quantum computer had significantly outperformed a supercomputer. Investors started piling into quantum computing stocks, but Cramer remained a skeptic. Back then, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang knocked the wind out of the quantum computing bubble after he remarked that the technology wasn't mature. Yet, in a turn of events in late May, IonQ, Inc. (NYSE:IONQ)'s shares surged by 22% after its CEO commented in an interview that his firm could be the 'NVIDIA' of quantum computing. Cramer's comments revolved around NVIDIA's CEO changing tack on quantum computing: 'There are four quantum stocks that we have to follow. Some of my people that I work with were very, I think that they were, probably concerned that I went out and said, look we ought to be looking at . . .we ought to be looking at, you know the ones that people talk about. But they're gonna fly!' A quantum computer on a countertop in an engineering laboratory with a technician at work. Recently, Cramer commented on IonQ, Inc. (NYSE:IONQ)'s valuation: 'Oh my god, it's so high and it's losing so much money, but it's quantum. If I offer you a considered explanation of why I think that stock's too expensive, most people ignore it, so all I'm going to say is it's too speculative for me. I don't know what else to say.' While we acknowledge the potential of IONQ as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an extremely cheap AI stock that is also a major beneficiary of Trump tariffs and onshoring, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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