This ETF takes a unique approach by selecting five holdings from
each of the ten sectors within the S&P 500 Index with the highest
dividend yields, explains David Fabian, of FMD Capital Management.
Each holding is then equal weighted so that every company has a
similar pull on the total return of the fund. The end result is a
portfolio of 50 large-cap stocks that includes a high degree of
diversification among every S&P sector.
The ALPS Sector Dividend Dogs ETF (SDOG) was introduced just over two years ago and has since amassed over $800 million in total assets.
Often times, dividend funds are skewed towards a specific area of
the market such as utilities, consumer staples, or energy companies.
However, SDOG
provides you with the opportunity to own equal segments of the economy
in one single package. In addition, because they select from some of
the largest and most liquid stocks in the world, the holdings are
generally high quality companies.
SDOG
has a current 30-day SEC yield of 3.32%; the fund has an expense ratio
of 0.40%. This ETF has returned nearly 25% over the last 52-weeks with
dividends factored back in.
This outperformance in SDOG
is likely due to larger exposure to technology, healthcare, and
telecommunications sectors, which have performed strongly over that
time frame.
The one drawback to this strategy that I find less appealing is that
dividends are paid on a quarterly basis. I typically prefer equity
income funds that offer monthly dividends to smooth out the payment
stream and allow for greater frequency of distributions.
Nevertheless, SDOG
should certainly be on your watch list of dividend paying ETFs that
include a reasonable expense ratio, higher than average yield, and
unique index construction methodology.
This fund can certainly be used as a core holding within the context
of a conservative income portfolio to gain market correlation and
yield.
The original Dogs of the Dow strategy focuses on selecting
ten of the highest dividend paying stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial
Average on an annual basis. SDOG does an admirable job of taking that one step farther to include a more diversified and balanced subset of companies.
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