3 High-Yield Dividend ETFs to Buy to Generate Passive Income

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Investors of all types can benefit from the power of dividend stocks. Although dividends are usually sought by those in or nearing retirement, those regular payouts can contribute mightily to your long-term returns wherever you are in your investing journey.

That's especially true when the overall market is going through a bad patch. In those times, recurring dividend payments can cushion a portfolio's returns and give an investor cash to reinvest while stocks are trading at lower levels.

Given today's expensive-looking market, those attributes may come in particularly handy if Wall Street experiences volatility or a big pullback in the year ahead. That's why these high-dividend exchange-traded funds (ETFs) could make for great selections today.

WisdomTree U.S. High Dividend Fund

If you like high and growing dividends combined with the stability of large-cap global stocks, the WisdomTree U.S. High Dividend Fund (NYSEMKT: DHS) may be for you.

The ETF currently sports a dividend yield of 3.5%, which is pretty good compared with the 1.2% average yield of the S&P 500 index. What's more, the WisdomTree U.S. High Dividend Fund concentrates on fairly safe, large stocks that generate lots of cash flows. Currently, its top holdings are oil and natural gas giant ExxonMobil, tobacco giant Altria Group, and pharmaceutical leader AbbieVie.

WisdomTree takes an interesting approach to selecting and weighting the stocks in this ETF. First, its portfolio is highly diversified, with 388 stocks today. To be included, a company must have paid dividends over the past 12 months and have a market capitalization of more than $100 million.

Second, rather than weighting the positions in the portfolio by market capitalization or dividend yield, it weights them by the total amount of dollars they distribute in dividends. Obviously, larger companies will likely pay out higher totals, but just because a company has a high market cap doesn't mean it will pay out as much as a smaller one. So this weighting based on what one might call the "market cap of the dividend" is a nifty way to balance size and strength with dividend yield.

WisdomTree then scores the selected securities on a "risk composite" metric that's based on two factors: a "quality" factor based on return on equity, and a "momentum" factor that gives credit to how well the stock has performed over the prior six- and 12-month periods.

The goal is to keep risky stocks out of the ETF by eliminating those that score in the bottom half of this risk composite. Interestingly, the ETF also won't hold the top 5% of stocks with the highest dividend yields. That may seem counter-intuitive, but a very high dividend can often be a reflection of a company that's in trouble -- and such a company may have a payout cut coming in the near future. Therefore, avoiding holding the very highest-yielding stocks is another way to mitigate risk, even if it may mean the ETF is sacrificing a bit of dividend yield.