Here’s The Secret To Dodging The Next Crash

Retirement

There are two words I’d bet cross your mind every time you buy a stock: “2008 repeat.”

As in: “I can’t afford one!”

I hear it regularly from Contrarian Income Report readers. It’s obvious why: we’re all 11 years older, and we can’t mess around—we need “correction-proof” growth and big dividends (I’m talking 6% yields and up) today!

By “correction-proof,” I mean stocks that swat away a crash, no matter if it’s October 2008, May 2018 or the pullback we saw just last month.

Sounds like a tall order, I know. But it’s not impossible.

Today I’m going to show you how I regularly find these stout plays, and how they’ve driven a steady 11.4% annualized return (mostly in safe dividend cash) for Contrarian Income Report members since we launched the service in 2015.

Moreover, our Contrarian Income Report portfolio sailed through the late 2018 meltdown, not falling nearly as far as the market while crushing regular stocks overall in the last 12 months!

Further on, I’ll reveal two “undercover” picks that should top your list now. They pay 6.5% dividends and coasted above last month’s meltdown.

Before we get to that, let’s brush aside the hype and look at what the raw data (the only guide we follow in Contrarian Income Report) says about another 2008.

2008 Redux? Here’s My Take

Start with the yield on the 10-year Treasury, which has tanked, meaning investors have bid the price of the long bond up and its yield down—a classic fear indicator—though rates have bounced back a bit in the last few days.

Even the corporate bean-counters are worried, with the latest Duke University/CFO Global Business Outlook showing 53% see a recession by the end of the third quarter of 2020. Stretch that to the end of 2020 and the number leaps to 67%.

But here’s where the plot twists: the bond market has been wrong before, and as recently as 2016!

And consider this: if we were about to hit the wall, I’d expect the Shanghai Composite Index to be in the dumps, with China in the crosshairs of the trade war. But Chinese stocks are actually up this year, and by 21%, more than the S&P 500.

Look, I’m not saying we should discount a recession, but in the short-term, these worries do seem overblown.

That’s an opportunity, especially if we grab out-of-favor 6.5%+ yielders. These stocks are critical today, because they set you up for big dividends and gains now—and protect you when a pullback does show up.

Because high, safe dividends are the “rubber duckies” of the investing world—they may take on a little water in the short run, but as the weeks go by, they always bounce back.

That’s what happened with Independence Realty Trust (IRT), an apartment REIT I flagged as a “correction-proof” buy in my May 29 article.

Independence quietly focuses on “secondary” Midwest and Southern markets with strong population and employment trends, like Austin, Indianapolis and Raleigh/Durham. That’s helped it build a sparkling 94.1% occupancy rate.

In other words, IRT has just the kind of well-supported income stream investors and money managers run to in a panic like August’s trade tantrum. Look what happened in that wipeout, when IRT’s 6%+ payout finally made its way onto the radar!

Stretch that timeline out a bit and you can really see the gains a snubbed high-yielder like IRT offers: in the four months since my article came out, the stock returned 36%, four times more than the market!

That brings me to the two 6%+ “correction-proof” plays that should be on your list today. And no, IRT isn’t one of them—at least not if you buy it “direct,” that is.

“Correction-Proof” Play No. 1 “Restores” IRT’s 6.5% Dividend

The trouble with buying IRT now is that its price has been bid up, driving its yield down (currently 5.2%), and we need more income than that to fund our retirement and hedge against the next downturn with a safe cash stream.

But don’t worry, we’re going to “rewind the tape” and grab IRT at a 6.5% dividend and a 19.8% discount, too!

That deal comes via the RMR Real Estate Income Fund (RIF). RIF is a closed-end fund (CEF) that trades at a 19.8% discount to the value of its portfolio (called a discount to NAV in CEF-speak), which boasts top REITs, including IRT.

If you’re looking for a correction-proof dividend, look no further! RIF floated through the August pullback!

Now let’s wrap up with …

“Correction-Proof” Play No. 2: A Cheap 7% Dividend That’s Doubled

For our final play, we’re going to stick with CEFs but switch investments—from REITs to rock-steady utilities and infrastructure plays.

We’re going to do it with the Macquarie Global Infrastructure Total Return Fund (MGU), a CEF trading at a 10.3% discount while throwing off a 7% dividend that’s growing—up 163% in the last decade alone!

No wonder MGU sailed through August’s trade tantrum—despite the “global” in its name!

If you’ve missed the latest run-up in pipelines and utilities, consider MGU your second chance to buy. But you’ll want to make your move now, before its 10.3% discount vanishes.

Brett Owens is chief investment strategist for Contrarian Outlook. For more great income ideas, click here for his latest report How To Live Off $500,000 Forever: 9 Diversified Plays For 7%+ Income.

Disclosure: none

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