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Home Investing

This Weird 12.8% Dividend Has Negative Management Fees

News Room by News Room
November 8, 2023
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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This Weird 12.8% Dividend Has Negative Management Fees

Not many people realize it, but there’s a way you can actually get paid to own stocks.

I’m not talking pennies, either. The fund I’m about to show you is capable of generating $64,000 in dividends per year on a $500,000 investment, thanks to its 12.8% yield, as of this writing.

This gives us three things:

  1. A large, reliable income stream with a lower risk of principal loss (unlike many annuity products and other income funds out there, where loss of principal is guaranteed).
  2. Diversification across over a hundred companies in one of the most oversold sectors today: technology—including firms driving the AI revolution, like Nvidia (NVDA).
  3. The opportunity to own this diversified portfolio essentially for free.

That third part is the trickiest to get our heads around, so let me explain. The Neuberger Berman Next Generation Connectivity Fund (NBXG) is a closed-end fund (CEF) that trades at a 20.7% discount as of this writing, around its 52-week low of a few days ago, which is also its all-time low.

Let’s break this down further: as I write this, NBXG has about $934 million in assets and 78,761,496 shares outstanding. That means each share is really worth about $11.86. However, any brokerage or financial website would show that its actual stock price is much lower.

As with all CEFs, it’s good to think of NBXG in terms of value and price. NBXG’s value is the total of its assets divided by the number of shares outstanding, which is $11.86 (the technical term for this is the “net asset value” or “NAV”). Its market price, however, is $9.40, meaning it’s on sale by a margin of about 20.7%. This is also the biggest discount available for a CEF focusing on mostly larger US tech stocks.

Compare that to the microcap stock–focused Royce Micro-Cap Trust (RMT), the third-most-discounted CEF out there, with a smaller 13.2% discount, despite its focus on much riskier assets.

RMT’s biggest equity holding, Transcat Inc. (TRNS), has an $807-million market cap, while NBXG’s biggest, fiber-optic supplier Amphenol

APH
(APH),
has a $47-billion market cap and revenues of $12 billion that grew over 15% in 2022. TRNS, on the other hand, had just $230 million in revenue in 2022, up 12.5%.

Given its lower risk, it makes no sense for NBXG to be priced this low, which is a good reason to buy on its own. But beyond that, there’s the fact that NBXG will effectively pay you to own it.

This isn’t something unique to NBXG; many CEFs give investors an opportunity in which, in the words of Forbes staff writer William Baldwin, “You are being paid to let someone select securities for your portfolio.”

So how does the math work? It’s quite simple. Let me quote Baldwin some more:

“What all these funds have in common: a negative cost of ownership. In effect, you are being paid to let someone select securities for your portfolio.

How does that formula work? Let’s say we have a hypothetical fund with a per-share NAV of $100 and a market price of $85. Suppose the fund makes annual cash distributions equal to 10% of its asset value. Every $10 check you get in the mail is something you bought for $8.50. So you have an instant $1.50 gain.

Now suppose the fund runs up annual overhead of 1%. That’s $1 out of your pocket. But then there’s the $1.50 windfall more than offsetting the expenses. The annual holding cost of a share with a net asset value of $100 is negative 50 cents. Your effective expense ratio is -0.5%.”

In other words, the bigger the discount, the more you’re being paid to own this portfolio. Instead of a hypothetical, let’s plug NBXG into this formula. As I write this, NBXG trades at $9.40 but its assets are $11.86. Factoring in its dividend yield, fees and discount, it has a negative ownership cost (and a big one: -1.36%!).

So far, we’ve uncovered three facts that make NBXG compelling:

  1. NBXG has better assets than RMT.
  2. NBXG yields more than RMT.
  3. NBXG effectively pays shareholders to invest in it.

It’s no surprise, then, that NBXG has been outperforming RMT when we look at the fundamental value of the portfolio.

A safer portfolio, higher income stream and better performance, yet NBXG is much cheaper than RMT. This is not just a market inefficiency, it’s an illogical mispricing. In fact, it’s just the kind of inefficiency we love to exploit when we invest in CEFs, all while collecting big income streams like NBXG’s 12.8% payout.

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 10.9% Dividends.”

Disclosure: none

Read the full article here

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