How To Double Your Dividends On Oversold Dividend Aristocrats

By Robert Hauver

This volatile market has beaten up many dividend stocks this year, including the Dividend Aristocrats, a group of elite dividend paying stocks who’ve raised their dividends every year for the past 25 years. In fact, Emerson Electric has increased its dividends for the past 54 consecutive years, and PPG has increased its dividends for the past 28 consecutive years.

Valuations: Both firms have had good earnings growth in their most recent fiscal years and quarters, but EMR looks more undervalued on a PEG basis. Both firms’ Price/Book ratios are roughly in line with their peers.

Selling Options: A pathway to 20%-plus yields.

By selling options on these dividend stocks, you can earn over 10 times the dividend yield for EMR during the next 4 months, and nearly 5 times the dividend yield for PPG.

(The call and put options trades listed below expire in Jan. 2012 for EMR and in Feb. 2012 for PPG.)
You’ll find more details on this and many other high yielding covered call trades in our Covered Call Table.
Covered Calls:

Cash Secured Puts:
These put trades also offer high options yields, and you can also attain a lower break-even price below the current 52-week low of both stocks.
You’ll find more details on this and many other high yield cash secured put trades in our Cash Secured Puts Table.

Financials: Both firms’ mgt. efficiency and margin ratios are superior to that of their industries.

Share Performance/Technical Data: Both firms are approaching the oversold threshold of 40 in their Relative Strength Index readings, and are less than 6% above their 52-week lows.

Disclosure: No positions at this time.
Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only, and isn’t intended as investment advice.

2 Solid Dow Dividend Stocks With 2 Ways to Earn 20% Yields

By Robert Hauver

Looking for the best stocks to buy in 2011? With the S&P down over 9% year to date, you may be looking for dividend paying stocks that have outperformed the market. In this respect, the Tech sector offers some of the best stocks around, as this sector has beaten all other sectors except Utilities over the last trading quarter. We found 2 well-known, undervalued Dow dividend stocks in the Tech sector with good earnings growth, strong financials, both of which offer high options yields for covered all sellers and cash secured put sellers

One of these stocks, Intel, is listed in our High Dividend Stocks By Sector Tables, since it has a higher dividend yield than average for the Tech sector. Intel increased its quarterly dividends from $.1812 to $.21 for the 3rd quarter of 2011. Microsoft just announced an even bigger dividend increase for the third quarter, rising to $.20 from $.16/share.

INTC-MSFT-DIVS

Selling Options Offers Much Higher Yields:

Even though these aren’t in the upper realm of high dividend yields, by selling options, you can greatly increase your yield to over 20% annualized on these stocks. In these 2 strategies the option yields outstrip the dividend yields by up to over 10 times.

Covered Calls: The INTC call option expires in December, and the MSFT calls expire in Jan. 2012.

The call option premiums for MSFT pay nearly over 9 times that of MSFT’s dividends during this 4-month period, ($1.78/call premium vs. $.20/dividend).

You’ll find more details on this and many other high yielding covered call trades in our Covered Call Table.

INTC-MSFT-CALLS

Cash Secured Puts: If you want to be more conservative, and achieve a lower break-even entry price, you can sell cash secured put options just below the current stock price and receive some rather high option yields. Due to the present market volatility, the difference in put options premiums vs. dividends is even higher than calls vs. dividends.

Again, MSFT offers the most dramatic advantage for selling options vs. dividends:  MSFT pays $2.10 for puts. vs. $.20 for dividends. The puts listed below all expire in Jan. 2012.

There are more details on this and many other cash secured puts trades in our Cash Secured Puts Table.

Note: Dividends in our puts tables only for comparison – unlike covered call sellers, put sellers don’t receive dividends.

INTC-MSFT-PUTS

Financials: In addition to having very low debt loads, (INTC is nearly debt-free), both of these stocks have strong management efficiency and margin metrics.

INTC-MSFT-ROE

Valuations: The 3.39% EPS growth figure for INTC might be too low, given that analysts typically undervalue Intel’s future earnings, as evidenced by INTC’s 4 consecutive earnings surprises over the past year. Thus, Intel’s PEG for the next fiscal year looks high. The Price to Book metrics for both firms are below the 3.91 average for the Tech sector.

INTC-MSFT-PEG

Technical Data: Intel has had a better time of it in 2011 than Microsoft, and has fared well in the correction. MSFT’s Relative Strength of 39.11 puts it just inside oversold territory.

INTC-MSFT-PERF

Disclosure: Author is long shares of Intel.

Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only and isn’t intended as individual investment advice.

These 5 Dividend Paying Bond ETF’s Are Beating The S&P

By Robert Hauver

The catastrophe that was predicted when Standard & Poors downgraded U.S. debt this summer didn’t faze the bond market. But it’s been the stock market that’s been hit, not the U.S. bond market, which just kept rising. Not that many dividend stocks held up during the correction, but these dividend paying ETF’s have beaten the S&P over the past month, quarter, and longer term:

T-BondPerf

Dividends Info: Even though the dividend yields on these ETF’s aren’t comparable to some high dividend stocks, they certainly are reasonable. Three of them pay monthly dividends, while the 2 others pay quarterly.

T-Bond-Divs

As of December 2010, the U.S. fixed income market was valued at $36 trillion, approx. twice the size of the U.S. stock market . Treasuries are 24% of this market, mortgage related are 25%, corporate debt is 21%, and the balance is in agency, money market, municipal, and asset-backed instruments. (Source: Securities Industry & Financial Markets Assoc.) (There’s a brief profile of all 5 ETF’s at the end of this article.)

Technical Data:

T-Bonds-RSI-Vol'y

All of these Bond ETF’s are trading above their 20-, 50-, and 200-day moving avgs.:

T-BondAvgs

So, given their outstanding share performance,is now the time to invest in any of these ETF’s? That depends upon your outlook – If you think the market is going to pull back again this fall/winter, then Bond ETF’s would probably be a good bet.  However, a safer approach might be to wait for a market bounce/rally, as these ETF’s are all near their overbought regions. Since these ETF’s usually decline when the market goes up, you’d be able to buy them cheaper.

For example, this chart and stochastic shows that an investor who bought ZROZ in late June, when the stochastic chart was showing it to be oversold, had very good timing, from a low of $69.65 in late June, to a high of $97.69 in Sept.  Even with this good timing, it’s been a bumpy ride along the way, with an approx. 10% draw-down, and 15% bounce-back in August, as the market bounced and retreated. During this most recent market bounce, ZROZ has fallen slightly below its overbought area, but has a long way to go to reach the oversold region:

T-Bond-ZROZ-Chart

Options: Only TLT has options available, and at the money covered calls and cash secured puts for Nov. 2012, for example are currently yielding approx. 20%-plus annualized. There are more details on this and many other option-selling trades in our Covered Calls Table and Cash Secured Puts Table.

Funds Synopses:

ZROZ: BofA Merrill Lynch Long U.S. Treasury Principal STRIPS Index is an unmanaged index comprised of long maturity Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal of Securities (“STRIPS”) representing the final principal payment of U.S. Treasury bonds. The principal STRIPS comprising the Underlying Index must have 25 years or more remaining term to final maturity and must be stripped from U.S. Treasury bonds having at least $1 billion in outstanding face value.

EDV: Seeks to track the performance of the Barclays Capital U.S. Treasury STRIPS 20–30 Year Equal Par Bond Index. Passively managed using index sampling.

TLT: The iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treasury Bond Fund seeks to approximate the total rate of return of the long-term sector of the United States Treasury market as defined by the Barclays Capital U.S. 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index.

TLO: Seeks to provide investment results that, before fees and expenses, correspond generally to the price and yield performance of the Barclays Capital Long U.S. Treasury Index (index ticker: LUTLTRUU).

VGLT: Maintains a dollar-weighted average maturity of 10 to 25 years, and invests primarily in government bonds.

Disclosure: Author is long TLT.

Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only and isn’t intended as investment advice.

How To Use Dividends And Options To Hedge Your Portfolio

By Robert Hauver

With the market’s violent meanderings these past 2+ months, “how to hedge your portfolio” has become a burning issue among investors. In this article we’re going outside of the high dividend stocks world and exploring the hedging potential of two different approaches to fighting market volatility and downturns.

Wouldn’t it be helpful to have an “inverse” vehicle that rises when the market slides, and, like your favorite dividend stocks, pays steady dividends? It seems that some US Treasury Bond ETF’s have been doing mostly just that during this bumpy time, and even year to date.

These 3 U.S. Treasury Bond ETF’s all pay monthly dividends and have been good hedging tools in 2011:

ETF-PERF

Profiles (Source – iShares website):

TLT: The iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treasury Bond Fund seeks to approximate the total rate of return of the long-term sector of the United States Treasury market as defined by the Barclays Capital U.S. 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index.

IEF: The iShares Barclays 7-10 Year Treasury Bond Fund seeks to approximate the total rate of return of the intermediate-term sector of the United States Treasury market as defined by the Barclays Capital U.S. 7-10 Year Treasury Bond Index.

TIP: The iShares Barclays Treasury Inflation Protected Securities Bond Fund seeks results that correspond generally to the price and yield performance, before fees and expenses, of the inflation-protected sector of the United States Treasury market as defined by the Barclays Capital U.S. Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) Index (Series-L).

Moving Averages: These ETF’s are all above their moving averages, and very close to their 52-week highs.

ETF-AVGS

So, when should you buy them? If you’re bearish, and believe that any rally the market puts together in the near future will only be a short-lived bounce, you’d look to buy them on the dip that would most likely happen with a market rally. The stochastic chart below shows overbought and oversold extremes for TLT. Investors who bought TLT in early July would have timed it perfectly, as TLT was oversold at that time. This almost perfect “mirror” price chart of TLT vs. the S&P illustrates TLT’s inverse relationship to the equities market, and how the majority of its gains have come since the summer correction:

TLTvs.SP-ChartSmall

(Chart Source: Yahoo Finance)

Technical Data: TLT and IEF have negative betas , and TIP has a very low .10 beta , which is consistent with their use as hedges vs. the S&P. Average True Range is a measure of stock volatility, and is an exponential moving average (14-days) of the True Ranges. The range of a day’s trading is high minus low, and True Range extends it to yesterday’s closing price if that was outside of today’s range.

ETF-BEAT-ATR

How To Hedge Via Options Trading:

The CBOE Volatility Index, a.k.a. the VIX, or the “fear factor”, offers an additional portfolio hedging strategy, via trading options. The CBOE defines the VIX  as “an implied volatility index that measures the market’s expectation of 30-day S&P 500 volatility implicit in the prices of near-term S&P 500 options.” The CBOE also states that the VIX has a -0.78 S&P beta correlation. (Source: CBOE)

However, there’s a lot of debate about this. As you can see in the table below, the VIX price movement isn’t a mirror inverse of the S&P, but has moved in an opposite direction, albeit it more pronounced:

ETF-VIX-PERF

VIX Moving Averages:

ETF-VIX-AVGS

VIX Options:

A VIX options trade is basically a trade on volatility, which, in general, ramps up during market pullbacks, as investors increase their S&P put purchases in order to protect their portfolios. Given the dramas in DC, Europe, and the Arab spring movement, do you think that heightened volatility will ensue over the next few months? If you do, then selling cash secured puts vs. the VIX is one way to earn some income up front and protect your portfolio from market turmoil.  However, this strategy is a bit different than the put options trades you’ll normally see in our Cash Secured Puts Table.

In the following put option trade, the put bid premium allows you to achieve a break-even near the the 50-day average of the VIX, and potentially earn up to a 16% yield in a little over 2 months.

The Cash Reserve for this trade is $3250.00:

ETF-VIX-PUTS

VIX options are European style, meaning that they generally may be exercised only on the Expiration Date. However, you can still buy to close your sold put position at any time prior to the day of exercise.

VIX options generally expire on the third Wednesday of each month. VIX option exercise will result in delivery of cash on the business day following expiration. The exercise-settlement amount is equal to the difference between the exercise-settlement value and the exercise price of the option, multiplied by $100.

The exercise-settlement value for VIX options (Ticker: VRO) shall be a Special Opening Quotation (SOQ) of VIX calculated from the sequence of opening prices of the options used to calculate the index on the settlement date. (Source: CBOE)

In the example above, the VIX price for the morning of 9/9/11 jumped $2.36, to $36.68, (as the S&P dropped 1.37%), which caused this $32.50 put to already fall in value from the $5.20 sale price to $5.00, so it could already be bought to close at a small profit, after one day.

Given the fast ups and downs of the VIX, i.e. the “volatility of volatility”, your most conservative approach is probably to buy to close any sold position once you’ve made your targeted profit. This option expires on Nov. 16, 2011.

Disclosure: Author is short VIX puts, and long TLT shares.

Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only and isn’t intended as individual investment advice.

© 2011 DeMar Marketing All Rights Reserved.

4 Dividend Aristocrats That Beat The Market Correction

By Robert Hauver

The S&P sank -17.27% from July 7th to its August 8th, causing many portfolio losses. Where can you find some solid dividend stocks to help you through the next market pullback? Try the Dividend Aristocrats – an elite group of dividend stocks that have raised their dividends for at least 25 consecutive years. Four members of the Dividend Aristocrats actually declined less than the S&P, rebounded more, AND are higher than their July 7th marks. Here’s how these four dividend paying stocks performed during and after the market correction:
ED-KO-MCD-HI-LOW
Three of these iconic firms offer basic items: famous brand versions of junk food, soda pop/bottled water, and apparel. Con Ed is the major diversified utility in the metro NY area.

Dividends:
Con Ed is listed in the Utilities section of our High Dividend Stocks By Sector Tables.
ED-KO-MCD-DIVS

Financials:
Although McDonalds and Coca-Cola have very strong mgt. metrics and good margins, further research will show that all 4 firms have lower ROE’s and higher ROI’s than their respective industry avgs. Relatively speaking, however, their reps as safe haven stocks renders them more attractive than their peers during a downturn.

ED-KO-MCD-ROE

Valuations: KO has superior EPS growth stats in the table below, and is the most undervalued on a PEG basis. Of course, utility stocks, such as Con Ed, aren’t known for having great growth figures, due to the heavily regulated environment in which they operate.
ED-KO-MCD-PEG

Two strategies that will bolster the defensive strength of these stocks are selling covered calls and cash secured puts.

VFC has the highest options yields of these 4 stocks, and we’ve listed it in our Covered Calls and Cash Secured Puts Tables, along with many other option selling trades.
The call and put premiums for VFC’s Feb. 2012 options are over 8 times the dividend amount during this 6-month term.

Covered Calls:

ED-VFC-CALLS

Cash Secured Puts:
ED-VFC-puts

Disclosure: No positions at this time.

Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only, and isn’t intended as individual investment advice.

© 2011 DeMar Marketing. All Rights Reserved.

Which Sectors Are Growing The Fastest In 2011 And Beyond?

By Robert Hauver

Which sectors grew earnings the fastest in Q2 2011?  Looking at EPS figures for the sectors shows that  Materials and Energy are leading the pack, which isn’t surprising, given the general rise in commodity prices earlier this year. Telecoms, Tech, and Industrials are also much improved from Q2 2010, while the much unloved Financials sector fell way behind:

S&P-EPS-2011-08-29

(Data Source: Standard & Poors)

Click here to learn which sector is thought to be poised for the most growth in 2012, and which dividend stocks in that sector show the most promise…

Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only, and isn’t intended as investment advice.