A Dynamic Duo for Yield in 2022 | Kiplinger

a-dynamic-duo-for-yield-in-2022-|-kiplinger

Investing for Income

Investors should maintain core positions in both REITs and utilities, with regular contributions to both.COVID-19, inflation and the Federal Reserve have so dominated the financial news that it was easy to miss the run-up in utility and real estate shares.

In the fourth quarter of 2021, real estate investment trusts (REITs) averaged a 17.5% return and utilities averaged 12.9%. The first few days of 2022 were poor, but I remain all-in on the duo, given that the chatter about higher interest rates is unlikely to translate soon into livable terms on savings accounts, CDs, money market funds and new government bonds.

I have doggedly dissed the dated doctrine that demeans REITs and utilities as “bond proxies” whose business models and investor returns depend on low and falling interest rates. I predict that both groups (other than in rare, random cases of mismanagement) will flourish as America absorbs this moderately higher inflation along with strong economic growth.

These are not merely defensive stock sectors. Utilities earn more and pay bigger dividends when they sell extra water and power. They are major landowners and both builders of and investors in renewable-energy projects.

The bulk of property-owning REITs are also developers and acquirers whose appreciating land and building values and rising rents support ever-higher dividends.

In 2021, according to Hoya Capital, 130 publicly traded realty trusts boosted dividends. That is more than 75% of them. It’s not unusual to see five-year compound growth rates of 10% for cash flow and dividends.

I urge that all income-focused portfolios maintain core positions in both REITs and utilities, with regular contributions as you see fit. Through Jan. 7, Standard & Poor’s real estate index shows an annualized 10-year total return of 12.6%; utilities clocked in at 11.2%. Dividends are 4% of that haul with utilities; 3.5% with real estate.

What Stocks to Buy NowWithin the property REIT sector, 15 of 16 subsectors returned at least 18% in 2021 (lodging was the exception). I advise you to stay with what is working, but with REITs, one year’s laggards often become next year’s leaders (not always the reverse, though).

Housing and industrial REITs are expensive now. Hold them for their high yields, but do not chase them with fresh cash. Lodging and healthcare REITs should score well in 2022; comeback ideas include Community Health (CHCT, $48) and Omega Healthcare (OHI, $31), and in hotels, Host Hotels and Resorts (HST, $18) and Xenia Hotels and Resorts (XHR, $18). Hotel REITs still pay zero or a pittance in dividends, but the shares are deeply discounted to net asset value, and when profits return, so will their payouts. Remember, retail and office REITs were pronounced dead two years ago but revived.

Utilities are essential businesses. Everyone needs heat and light, and usually there is a local monopoly. Utilities should clean up over the years from electric cars and cheaper electricity generation from wind and solar. They have ready access to inexpensive capital and a friendly administration that wants to help with reconstruction and service quality.

My favorites include American Water Works (AWK, $174), National Grid (NGG, $72) and Xcel Energy (XEL, $69). Or use the Utilities Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLU, $70). I am not a fan of indexing, but consolidation within the industry leaves less scope for active managers to find mispriced investments. The ETF’s yield is just shy of 3%.

Your Guide to Roth Conversions

Special Report

Tax Breaks

Your Guide to Roth ConversionsA Kiplinger Special Report

February 25, 2021

The 10 Best Closed-End Funds (CEFs) for 2022

CEFs

The 10 Best Closed-End Funds (CEFs) for 2022These high-yielding CEFs won’t just significantly boost your portfolio income. They’ll also allow you to buy their underlying stocks and bonds at a di…

January 12, 2022

Sweet Silicon: 5 Superb Semiconductor Stocks for 2022

stocks

Sweet Silicon: 5 Superb Semiconductor Stocks for 2022If 2021 was a good year for the chip industry, 2022 could be downright great. Here are five semiconductor stocks if you’re seeking out growth.

January 11, 2022

66 Best Dividend Stocks You Can Count On in 2022

dividend stocks

66 Best Dividend Stocks You Can Count On in 2022Yield isn’t everything when it comes to finding the best dividend stocks. Income investors know there’s no substitute for regular dividend increases o…

January 25, 2022

9 High-Yield Stocks Doling Out 5% or More

dividend stocks

9 High-Yield Stocks Doling Out 5% or MoreThese high-income stocks deliver on headline yield, offering up between roughly 5% and 9%. They also have the financial fortitude to keep those payout…

January 24, 2022

22 Best Retirement Stocks for an Income-Rich 2022

dividend stocks

22 Best Retirement Stocks for an Income-Rich 2022Ideally, your retirement stocks will help you generate a sizable and reliable income stream. These 22 dividend payers make the grade.

January 21, 2022

Kiplinger’s Weekly Earnings Calendar

stocks

Kiplinger’s Weekly Earnings CalendarCheck out our earnings calendar for the upcoming week, as well as our previews of the more noteworthy reports.

January 21, 2022


Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *