• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

This Affordable Spanish Town Is Full of Old-World Charm

September 22, 2025

I Saved $4,200 This Year Using These 11 Senior Discounts — and I’m Only 52

September 22, 2025

I Looked Successful, But Inside I Was Falling Apart — This Trifecta Method Took Me From Rock Bottom to Peak Performance

September 22, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • This Affordable Spanish Town Is Full of Old-World Charm
  • I Saved $4,200 This Year Using These 11 Senior Discounts — and I’m Only 52
  • I Looked Successful, But Inside I Was Falling Apart — This Trifecta Method Took Me From Rock Bottom to Peak Performance
  • Handle Reports, Presentations, and Email with One Lifetime Microsoft Office License
  • Grab This $190 MacBook Air for Travel, Meetings, and Working on the Go
  • 7 Places In Italy Where Retirees Can Live Well On Social Security—For As Little As $1000 A Month, According To A New Report
  • 6 Ways Anyone Can Shop at Sam’s Club Without a Membership
  • Most American Workers Now Say Their Jobs Hurt Their Mental Health
Monday, September 22
Facebook Twitter Instagram
FintechoPro
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
FintechoPro
Home » This 9.9%-Paying Bond Fund Is Ridiculously Cheap (13% Discount)
Investing

This 9.9%-Paying Bond Fund Is Ridiculously Cheap (13% Discount)

News RoomBy News RoomAugust 26, 20231 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

It’s back to the 1980s in the corporate-bond world—with yields through the roof. (I’m talking safe 9.9%+ payouts when we buy bonds through high-yielding funds like the one we’ll delve into below.)

If you were investing back then, you may recall that bond yields soared well into double-digit territory before falling back to earth:

Source:

In other words, if you bought a corporate-bond fund in 1981, you’d have gotten a 14.2% return every year for the bonds’ duration, which in some cases was a decade. And you’d have gotten that return in cash.

Okay, so maybe I’m exaggerating a little bit here: yields aren’t quite that high today, but they are still pretty great for income-seekers like us. And better still, we have a lot more time to lock them in than folks did 40 years ago.

Because of the Fed’s higher interest rates, we’ve seen yields skyrocket to their current level of 8.5%. And unlike in the 1980s, those yields are sticking around. So the same principle applies: get the right bonds, hold them for a long time and you’re getting 8.5% in cash as a passive income stream until they mature.

And since bondholders are made whole at the end of the bond holding period, your invested capital is paid in full, too. But before we go further, let’s take a quick side trip to talk about the elephant in the room: bond-default risk.

To be sure, this is a real risk, but it is often misunderstood. To explain, let’s cut through the noise and look at how many defaults there really are: in 2022, the corporate-bond market saw 32 defaults. To put that in context, the corporate-bond market is massive, issuing over $1 trillion a year.

With so many bonds out there, it’s no surprise that defaults aren’t really as big of a deal as people make them out to be, especially if you buy a bond-focused closed-end fund (CEF) instead of an individual bond. That way we’re “outsourcing” our bond picks to a pro who knows how to steer clear of companies like the 32 that defaulted last year.

Consider, for example, a CEF called the Pioneer High Income Fund (PHT), which yields 9.9% and sports a 13% discount to net asset value (NAV, or the value of the bonds in its portfolio). These discounts only exist with CEFs, and PHT’s has been growing!

PHT has seen its discount slowly widen since the start of 2016, the last time bond yields peaked because the Fed was raising interest rates. This doesn’t make sense, given PHT’s strong performance since then, returning 57%, compared to a 37% return for the benchmark SPDR Bloomberg High Yield Bond ETF (JNK).

And if we zero in on the fund’s performance in the first two years of the Fed’s last rate-hike cycle, we see that it trounced JNK and nearly matched the performance of the S&P 500—a big move for a bond fund!

What’s more, all of PHT’s return came in the form of a 9.9% annualized yield during that two-year period. Bear in mind also that PHT had a brief window back then to buy bonds when yields were exceptionally high; yields peaked at 10% for a few days and fell back down to 6.5% in half a year.

In other words, there were only so many bonds PHT could buy in that brief window to boost its dividend. Today, though, corporate bonds have hovered at an average 8.2% yield for over a year.

That means PHT has had a lot of time already to buy bigger yields to sustain payouts, and its managers have even more time, since the Fed isn’t looking to cut rates anytime soon.

In 2016, savvy traders anticipated this opportunity and priced PHT up to a big premium as rates rose. But the opposite is happening today: corporate-bond yields have stayed higher for longer, and PHT’s discount has gotten bigger.

This makes no sense. PHT now has an easy time getting higher-yielding bonds to sustain its 9.9% dividend yield. And because it trades at a 13.1% discount to NAV, it only needs to earn an 8.6% return on its portfolio to sustain payouts (as the yield that really matters in terms of sustainability is calculated based on the fund’s NAV, not the discounted market price).

With the average yield on corporate bonds at 8.5%. It’s gotten very easy for PHT to maintain its dividend, and instead of pricing this fund at a premium, its discount is getting wider!

Markets are supposed to be efficient, but the truth is, they aren’t always, especially in the small world of CEFs. These are the mispricings we live to take advantage of in CEF Insider, and if you buy a bond fund like PHT today, you’ll do so before the discounts on these CEFs disappear, pulling their prices higher as they do.

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 10.4% Dividends.”

Disclosure: none

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Even Time-Strapped Business Owners Can Share an Engaging Reading Experience with Their Kids

Investing September 20, 2025

Turnover Is Costing You More Than You Think — Here’s the Fix

Investing September 19, 2025

How Pana Food Truck Started Selling Arepas

Investing September 18, 2025

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy Is Fighting Against Bureaucracy

Investing September 17, 2025

Here Are the Top 50 Mistakes I’ve Seen Kill New Companies

Investing September 16, 2025

Google Parent Alphabet Reaches $3T Market Cap

Investing September 15, 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

I Saved $4,200 This Year Using These 11 Senior Discounts — and I’m Only 52

September 22, 20250 Views

I Looked Successful, But Inside I Was Falling Apart — This Trifecta Method Took Me From Rock Bottom to Peak Performance

September 22, 20250 Views

Handle Reports, Presentations, and Email with One Lifetime Microsoft Office License

September 21, 20250 Views

Grab This $190 MacBook Air for Travel, Meetings, and Working on the Go

September 21, 20250 Views
Don't Miss

7 Places In Italy Where Retirees Can Live Well On Social Security—For As Little As $1000 A Month, According To A New Report

By News RoomSeptember 21, 2025

Looking for the best places to retire? Why not consider Italy. A new report from…

6 Ways Anyone Can Shop at Sam’s Club Without a Membership

September 21, 2025

Most American Workers Now Say Their Jobs Hurt Their Mental Health

September 21, 2025

TikTok Deal Approved But Not Finalized: President Trump

September 21, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2025 FintechoPro. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.