Risk and returns often go hand-in-hand, and income hunters who are
willing to stomach a little more risk can look overseas for attractive
dividends in globally focused exchange traded funds.
With the Federal Reserve depressing yields on U.S. government bonds,
investors have branched out to riskier investments for yields.
[Surveying the Dividend ETF Landscape]
"What we have is money that had typically gone to fixed income now
coming into equities," Chris Wallis, chief investment officer of Vaughan
Nelson Investment Management, said in a Wall Street Journal article.
"They're looking for bond substitutes and it doesn't mean that the money
is going to exit and go either to cyclical stocks or go to cash. I
think it's going to stay where it is."
For starters, the Global X SuperDividend ETF (NYSEArca: SDIV), which
tracks the performance of 100 equally-weighted companies with some of
the highest dividend yields in the world, comes with a 7.67% 12-month
dividend yield and a 0.58% expense ratio. The fund is up 11.3%
year-to-date.
Regional breakdowns include..(more).
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