3 Dividend ETFs You Haven’t Heard of That Yield Over 5%

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  • The Amplify Natural Resources Dividend Income ETF (NDIV)’s 41 natural resource dividend stocks have a monthly yield of 5.72%. NDIV managers noted that war and green energy demand could trigger a commodities supercycle.

  • The Alternative Access First Priority CLO Bond ETF (AAA) invests exclusively in AAA-rated senior CLO bonds and yields 5.19% monthly.

  • The Columbia Research Enhanced Real Estate ETF (CRED) yields 5.56% and uses a rules-based system to select REITs with stronger growth and income potential.

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How many ETFs can you name that yield over 5% and don’t involve a covered call strategy? The ETF you have in mind is unlikely to match Amplify Natural Resources Dividend Income ETF (NYSEARCA:NDIV), Alternative Access First Preferred CLO Bond ETF (NYSEARCA:AAA)and Columbia Research Enhanced Real Estate ETF (NYSEARCA:CRED).

All of these companies have yields above 5%, and they earn their income in niche ways that are worth looking into. These ETFs can make great additions to your portfolio if you pair them with popular low-yield ETFs.

Higher yields will become more important in the coming months as the Fed shows greater willingness to cut interest rates. Current Fed Chairman Jerome Powell’s term will end in May 2026. He is expected to be replaced by a Trump appointee.

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Therefore, the next Fed chair is likely to be more dovish on interest rates. Low interest rates will weigh on U.S. Treasury yields and lead to a surge in interest in the following high-yield dividend ETFs.

The Amplify Natural Resources Dividend Income ETF tracks the performance before fees of the EQM Natural Resources Dividend Income Index. It holds 41 dividend stocks from companies involved in natural resources.

The companies it holds are all cash cows, and the dividend yield should be kept above 5%. Natural resources have historically been inflation hedges, so these hard assets are well-suited to the current environment.

The fund’s own managers say there could be a “commodity supercycle” due to “current world events (wars, ongoing pandemics, supply chain issues, growing demand for green energy commodities, etc.)”

The NDIV yield is 5.72% monthly. It has an expense ratio of 0.59%, or $59 per $10,000.

Not all bonds have to come from the government in order to invest. If you want top-notch safety, the first thing that comes to mind is Treasury bonds, but you can get even more with AAA-rated bonds.

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