You are receiving this email because you signed up to receive our free e-letter Dividend Investing Weekly, or you purchased a product or service from its publisher, Eagle Financial Publications. [Dividend Investing Weekly] [Cash Machine]( [Quick Income Trader]( [Breakout Profits Alert]( [Hi-Tech Trader]( Does Robinhoodâs Valuation Signal Dot-Com Risk All Over Again?  by Bryan Perry
Editor, [Cash Machine]( 08/09/2021 Sponsored Content [The 'Set and Forget' Dividend Portfolio for Retirement]( The easiest way to self-manage your dividend income portfolio without losing a ton of money is following my advice below. Dividend stocks I personally recommend and buy myself are meant to held for a long time. One of my current dividend payers to 'set and forget' for now is paying over 25% yields. Thereâs a process I follow to build this dividend portfolio that grows and ends up paying your bills for life. See how easy it is to follow. [Click here to see how this 'set and forget' dividend portfolio works.]( Investors around the globe that depend on yield for pension distributions and general living expenses are finding it more difficult than ever to identify assets with dependable, low-beta features that pay decent dividends. With the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) data showing annual inflation running at 5.4%, one needs to make 15% just to net 9.6% in inflation-adjusted return on equity. Tell that to your broker and see what kind of response you get. Well, for some of us who grew up in the days of Michael Milliken and Drexel Burnham Lambert (Iâm dating myself), pitching 9-15% yields to prospective clients was an everyday practice. I remember that when I was working as a broker at Bear Stearns, KKR put out an RJR Nabisco convertible bond with a 13.5% coupon. At the time, RJR was a private holding of KKR that was soon to go public. Selling this paper was like shooting fish in a barrel. But so was selling the Solomon Brothers Nikkei Puts when the Nikkei was trading at 40,000 and the Japanese were buying up Times Square and Pebble Beach. By the way, both trades worked out fabulously, and I organized a party on a 110-foot yacht for the entire trading floor on San Francisco Bay. Yes, those were the days -- 1990 to be exact. [Bidenâs $10 Trillion Tidal Wave of Federal Spending]( Five key sectors will get the lionâs share of this government mandated windfall. This newly released dossier details the #1 play in each sector, and how each could make up to 200% or more on their money in the next 12 months alone. [Click here now to tap into this government gold rush.]( Ace Greenberg was Bear's CEO, arguably the best bridge player in the world and held no quarter with people who had âwoke feelingsâ about things that got in the way of business. He was famous for telling an audience of 110 pinstripe-suit-wearing employees on our trading floor that âstocks are like toilet paper -- use them and throw them away.â Sounds simple. At the time, Larry Kudlow was the senior in-house economist at Bear, and would show up from time to time when the market closed at 1:00 pm Pacific Time to pontificate on his view of the investing landscape, lighting up a Dunhill with his Cartier lighter in a strict no smoking building. Yeah, right. The guy was great to listen to then, and still is today. When Ace stepped down, Jimmie Cain took the helm and to everyoneâs surprise, lost his focus, let his MBS minions puff up his ego with the promise of ginormous profits and, summarily, the house of Bear Stearns came crashing down with the entire mortgage crisis. Thankfully, I was long gone from the company before that trap-door situation unfolded. To say Iâm lucky, blessed or both is an understatement. After leaving Bear, I was employed at Lehman Brothers for a time before that house burned up as well. Oddly enough, two of my favorite movies are âThe Big Shortâ and âMargin Call.â 1999 through 2007 was a wild time in the securities business as risk was thrown to the curb for yield and profit, with no regard for if or when the rug would get pulled out from under everything. Oh, how history has a way of repeating itself, and in this day and age, it seems the time for a repeat of foolish investing behavior happens in a more abbreviated fashion. Take for instance the rise of Cathie Wood and the Ark Funds. From a marketing standpoint, itâs a phenomenal story, having seen total assets under management (AUM) rise to more than $50 billion in the span of just over five years. Investors that bought in early during 2018-2020, like those that got in the MBS programs in 2000-2001, are making out pretty huge. For those that bought in during late 2020 and after, they havenât made a dime and the S&P has rallied from 3,600 to 4,400 since last December. [How To Use Technical Indicators (The Right Way)]( Predictive analysis is revolutionizing the trading space as we know it. With high-accuracy forecasting, traders can dodge losses and squeeze the most out of gains. Our experts want to empower you with the knowledge and education to trade intelligently. Check out today's deep dive into cutting-edge, predictive technical indicators to see the tricks and tips you may not know about. [Click here to register for free.]( Hereâs the problem I see where history might rear up and repeat itself. The flagship Ark Innovation ETF (ARKK) is trading at dot-com valuations. Anytime a stock or fund has a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of negative 65x that reflects huge losses on revenues, it should be a cause for concern, especially when the top 10 holdings account for 51.78% of total assets. There is no room for escape from the inevitable massive multiple contraction if the market corrects more than the garden variety 3-5% witnessed during the past 16 months. Source: [www.etf.com]( If the stock market continues its path higher without a major correction, then shares of ARKK might well hold the 200-day moving average (MA) and push up through the resistance line noted in the chart above. But here is where I have to throw the caution flag. The ARK Innovation Fund has bought more than 3.6 million shares of Robinhood Markets Inc. (HOOD) as of last Friday. This is a meme stock. The company may never make money and, for fiduciaries, may be a liability issue if the client account holderâs profile isnât tagged as crazy. With almost 98 million shares set to hit the market from selling shareholders in the first tranche of venture money moving to exit, and the stock trading in a 40-point range in the past week, one must wonder if this is investing or gambling dot-com style. I would tend to think the latter is more accurate. The whole meme, Reddit, Wall Street Bets, Diamond Hands movement smacks very big of 1999, and for the sake of the 20 million account holders at Robinhood, I hope it doesnât end badly, but Iâm afraid it will. I have my own ideas about what, how and when the market will correct, and it usually comes when the great majority of investors donât see it coming. Investing in stocks with rising sales and no earnings is fraught with risk, and thatâs whatâs in fashion for a great portion of the investing public. If the market does endure a 10-20% correction, I predict shares of ARKK will drop to $65, implying a nearly 50% decline. I truly hope Iâm wrong, but having been through a few periods where P/E ratios get redefined as âmetricsâ and other useful phrases to rationalize sky-high valuations, I think the âcomeuppanceâ of judgment day is a matter of when and not if. Sincerely, Bryan Perry
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Editor, Breakout Profits Alert About Bryan Perry: [Bryan Perry]Bryan Perry specializes in high dividend paying investments. This weekly e-letter combines his decades-long experience in income investing with a simple, easy-to-read format that investors of all stripes can work into their portfolios. To ensure future delivery of Eagle Financial Publication and Bryan Perry emails please add financial@info2.eaglefinancialpublications.com to your address book or contact list. View this email in your [web browser](. This email was sent to {EMAIL} because you are subscribed to Bryan Perry's Dividend Investing Weekly. To unsubscribe please click [here](. If you have questions, please send them to [Customer Service](mailto:customerservice@eaglefinancialpublications.com). Legal Disclaimer: Any and all communications from Eagle Products, LLC. employees should not be considered advice on finances. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized advice on finances. Eagle Financial Publications - Eagle Products, LLC. - a Caron Broadcasting Company
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