UTG And UTF: Enjoy The Recovery, But Don't Keep The Cash

Summary

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OlenaMykhaylova

Utilities have been a solid, long-term investment for generations, and many writers, commentators, and investors here on Seeking Alpha and elsewhere are counting on the asset class to recover and resume its positive returns.

Many of us hold closed-end funds in the utility/infrastructure sector, with Cohen & Steers Infrastructure (NYSE:UTF) and Reaves Utility Income (NYSE:UTG) among the favorites. Both have good long-term records, with annualized lifetime total returns, since their inceptions in 2004, of 8.2% on market price and an even better 8.6% on NAV, for UTF; and 8.4% on market price and 8.7% on NAV, for UTG. UTG is especially highly regarded by investors for its history (until 2021) of steady dividend increases, with 12 of them in 17 years since its inception in 2004.

Although UTF and UTG have suffered during the recent downturn, they have both fared

So it is not surprising that many investors have included UTG and UTF in their portfolios and are patiently waiting for the sector to turn around. What makes the wait somewhat easier to bear for some investors are the generous cash yields of 8.6% and 8.8% currently offered by UTG and UTF respectively. In fact, I suspect that one reason UTG and UTF may have performed somewhat better this past year than the indices that cover the same utility asset class could have something to do with the higher distribution rates; which may provide some comfort to UTG and UTF investors while they wait for the recovery. Investors in XLU may find the 3.4% yields the ETF pays to be less reassuring that a turn-around is close than the 8%+ yields of UTF and UTG.

Closed-End Fund Distributions: Not All the Same

Unfortunately, high distributions paid by closed-end funds in the midst of "losing streaks" in terms of their total return performance, are often not quite the positive sign for investors as they might appear. The reason, of course, has to do with the source of the funds' distributions. Most closed-end fund investors know that their funds tend to fall into one of two categories with regard to where they get the cash to pay their distributions. They are either:

That practice is called "managing distributions" and many closed-end funds (primarily equity funds) do it in order to bridge periods when they are not earning enough income to support their distributions. It makes sense as a way to bridge the gap between profitable periods, but if the gap is too long it turns into "a bridge too far" and begins to eat away at the capital of the fund. Then some months later (or even years, but we hope not) when the market turns positive, the shareholders have less capital remaining in the fund and aren't able to fully participate in the rally.

Investors who want to hold UTG, UTF, and other funds that they believe are good recovery candidates, and don't want to erode their capital while they wait, have two options:

CEF Data is an excellent site for checking out closed-end funds (and also business development companies ("BDCs") which have many similar characteristics) and includes the earnings coverage ratio of their distributions. Readers looking for credit funds that have 100% coverage (or close to it) of distributions, and whose payouts can be kept and not reinvested without fear of eroding the capital base, may wish to consider (1) Closed-End funds like Blackstone Long-Short Credit (BGX), Invesco Senior Income (VVR), Barings Participation Investors (MPV), or Oxford Lane Capital (OXLC), and (2) Business Development Companies like Ares Capital (ARCC), Barings BDC (BBDC) and Bain Capital Specialty Finance (BCSF).