Here are some dividend ETFs to consider as the group comes back into favor with investors

FAN Editor

In the world of dividends, there’s a key distinction investors must understand, CFRA’s Todd Rosenbluth told CNBC’s “ETF Edge” on Monday.

“We at CFRA view things from a dividend growth perspective and a dividend yield perspective,” said Rosenbluth, his firm’s senior director of ETF and mutual fund research.

“ETFs tend to be focused on how the company pays a dividend and how that yield is part of the portfolio,” he said. “Dividend growth ETFs are more forward-looking. These are companies with either earnings power to have historically paid a dividend or the earnings power to continue to grow and raise that dividend as opposed to the more defensive-laden dividend-yield ETFs.”

The popular ProShares S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats ETF (NOBL) and SPDR S&P Dividend ETF (SDY) are examples of dividend growth ETFs, Rosenbluth said.

“Those look backward at the last 20 to 25 years of companies raising dividends. An ETF like DGRW … is actually more of a projection,” he said, referring to the WisdomTree U.S. Quality Dividend Growth Fund (DGRW).

“That DGRW ETF has more tech exposure than those two other ones,” he said. “Tech as growing, but also the dividend base is growing.”

This distinction is becoming increasingly important as dividend ETFs come back into favor on Wall Street, Rosenbluth said.

“They’ve been out of favor for the first half of 2020. In July, there were net inflows to these ETFs, probably because companies stopped cutting the dividend the way that they had been since the pandemic first emerged,” he said.

For Global X’s Jay Jacobs, whose firm runs two “superdividend” ETFs, there are two trends to watch that are impacting the dividend market right now.

First, “you have no yield out there” in the bond market, Jacobs, his firm’s head of research and strategy, said in the same “ETF Edge” interview. “The Federal Reserve has lowered the federal funds rate to zero and corporate spreads are trading very tightly.”

“On top of that, you have the retiring baby boomer generation that is looking to transition their portfolios from more of a growth focus to an income focus,” he said. “When you combine those two things and put this huge emphasis on trying to find yield in more narrowly sliced corners of the market, we think equities are a great place to find it.”

With the Global X SuperDividend ETF (SDIV) and the Global X SuperDividend US ETF (DIV), Jacobs’ firm has found several investments that work well for income-seeking investors in this market.

“We think there’s certain strategies that can generate very significant yield like covered call strategies, which buy stocks and sell call options on top of it,” Jacobs said. “The area that we’re very bullish on right now is preferred stocks, which have kind of a middle place between bonds and equities. They pay pretty high yields, and these are largely U.S.-based financial firms that are showing … strength in this environment right now.”

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