DIV ETF Yields 7.3% and Pays Monthly. Here Are the Pros and Cons

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With a monthly dividend payout and a yield that beats inflation, the Global X SuperDividend ETF (NYSEARCA:DIV) is a tempting choice for dividend investors. However, there are several pros and cons that investors should weigh when it comes to this high-yield ETF.

What Does the DIV ETF Do? 

DIV is another one of Global X’s family of monthly-dividend ETFs, which also includes the likes of the Global X SuperDividend ETF (NYSEARCA:SDIV) and the Global X SuperDividend REIT ETF (NYSE:SRET). DIV “seeks to track the performance of the Solactive Global SuperDividend Index.”

The key difference between DIV and SDIV is that while SDIV focuses on investing in the highest-yielding dividend stocks globally, DIV narrows it down to just the United States by accessing fifty of the highest-yielding equities in the U.S. market. This gives investors less international diversification but also less volatility and possibly a higher-quality group of holdings.

DIV currently yields 7.3%, dwarfing the S&P 500’s dividend yield of 1.7% and more than doubling the yield of the 10-Year Treasury note. It even beats the rate of inflation (a high hurdle of 6%), making it a compelling play from an income perspective. The ETF has a sterling track record when it comes to the consistency and longevity of its payout — DIV has paid out a monthly dividend every month for over 10 years.

In addition to generating monthly dividend income, part of DIV’s strategy is to also reduce volatility by screening for equities with low betas in relation to the S&P 500.

Solid Diversification

This is a nicely-diversified ETF. It contains 51 stocks, and DIV’s top 10 holdings make up just 22.6% of the fund, while no single position makes up more than 2.75%.

DIV is also fairly diversified by sector. While real estate makes up nearly 30% of holdings, basic materials stocks account for 16.8%, industrials account for 13.4%, energy makes up 12.4%, and financials make up 10.5%. Generally speaking, these are lower-growth, more cyclical sectors of the stock market but ones that are also known for their dividend payouts and typically higher dividend yields.

You’ll find a pretty wide mix of holdings here — top position B&G Foods (NYSE:BGS) is a packaged foods company perhaps best known for its B&G Pickles and brands like Crisco and Cream of Wheat. It yields nearly 5% even after slashing the size of its dividend payout last year.

The energy sector is well-known for high yields, and there are plenty of energy stocks and MLPs here among DIV’s top holdings, including San Juan Basin Royalty, MPLX LP and Magellan Midstream Partners.