There seems to be no shortage of big-yield investment ideas on the internet. However, any discussion of the associated tax consequences seems sparse. And despite this spareness, taxes have a major impact on your bottom line and should absolutely be a major consideration before investing. In this report, we first review important details on PTY’s big 10.1% yield, and then dig deeper into three big tax risks (including your account type, your personal tax rates, and the tax inefficiency of PTY versus compelling big-yield alternatives). We conclude with our strong opinion on investing in PTY and some general (but very important) advice on building a big-yield investment portfolio to optimize your after-tax bottom-line income.
PIMCO Big-Yield Bond Funds (PAXS, PDI, PDO, PTY): Distributions > NII
PIMCO’s big-yield bond funds are often an income-investor favorite because of their large 9% to 13% yields. Some investors have been traumatized in recent years as prices fell hard (when the fed rapidly hiked interest rates) while other investors haven’t cared as long as the big monthly income payments kept rolling in. This article provides an update on PIMCO bond funds now, and my opinion on which may (or may not) be worth considering for investment, mainly in light of how PIMCO is sourcing the distribution payments to investors.
Big Yield Bond CEFs: Is It Safe To Invest? (Interest Rate Risk)
Income-focused investors love big-yield bond CEFs because of their large distributions payments, often paid monthly. But if you’ve been following along, you know most of them (i.e. the popular PIMCO and BlackRock bond CEFs) have been feeling a lot of pain over the last year (because as rates have gone up, bond prices have gone down). Granted some investors don’t care about price as long as the income keeps rolling in, but it really does matter. In this report, we provide an update on three popular Bond CEFs (two from PIMCO and one from BlackRock), and share our views on whether the interest rate environment is signaling an “all clear” sign. We conclude with our strong opinion on investing.
Bond CEFs: Prices, Premiums and Interest Rates
A quick note to share some updated data and commentary on a handful of popular big-yield bond CEFs from PIMCO and BlackRock. This note may be of particular interest to those following our High Income NOW portfolio. For starters, here is a look at the latest movement in premiums and discounts (versus NAV).
Update: PDI and PTY: Ugly ROC, Buyer Beware
UPDATE: Unbeknownst to many investors, PIMCO’s big-yield funds, PDI and PTY, are including a significant return of capital in their beloved big distributions (and it’s largely hidden through derivative swaps transactions). We reached out to PIMCO for comment, and found their replies (included in this report) concerning. These two big-yield PIMCO funds are simply not as good as many investors believe. Caveat emptor.
PDI and PTY: Ugly ROC, Buyer Beware
The PIMCO Dynamic Income Fund (PDI) and PIMCO Corporate & Income Opportunity Fund (PTY) are absolute favorites among many income-focused investors. They both have long track records (one decade and two decades, respectively) of successfully delivering big monthly income payments (they currently yield 13.5% and 10.6%, respectively) and because they’ve sourced all that big income over the years without the return of capital (“ROC”) that plagues so many other high-income funds. However, a look under the hood reveals that these two PIMCO trophy funds have, in fact, been using ROC to fund their distributions (despite marketing materials that suggest otherwise). In this report, we review all the important details and then conclude with our strong opinion on investing—caveat emptor!
PIMCO CEFs: Special Year-End Distributions
To the delight of many income investors, PIMCO announced Monday that a handful of its big-yield bond funds will be offering special year-end distributions. Here is the press release from PIMCO. And you can read our analysis on these PIMCO funds here here and here.
Top 10 Big Yields: BDCs, MLPs, REITs and CEFs
The market has been ugly this year. Steep interest rate hikes are not yet slowing inflation, but they are dragging down stock and bond prices, as energy costs continue to soar. And as counterintuitive as it may seem, these conditions are creating select attractive contrarian opportunities, particularly for disciplined high-income investors. In this report, we share data on over 100 big-yield investments (including REITs, MLPs, CEFs and BDCs), and then rank our top 10, starting with 10 and counting down to our top idea.