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Capturing dividends with covered calls—are you ready?

 
Saturday, September 24th, 2011 | Vance Harwood
 

In a recent post I gave an overview of dividend capture strategies.

In some situations an effective way to hedge risk with a dividend capture strategy is to use covered call options.  If you are not familiar with options this might sound exotic, but it’s truly the training wheels of option trading.  With covered calls you can introduce yourself to the conservative, hedging possibilities of options while increasing your odds of making modest amounts of money.   Before getting into the details,  please review the checklist below, to see if you are ready / able to do this:

  • Do you have enough capital?
    • This strategy requires you to buy hundreds of shares of stock to make it worth your trouble, do you have the money?
    • You can use margin to buy the stock, but that will increase your costs.
  • Will you be content with a small gain?
    • This strategy is generally not effective with stocks with large dividends (e.g. 4% or higher).  It works better with stocks that offer annualized dividends in the 2% to 3% range
    • On the good news side, you generally get the small gain with less than 10 business days of investment
  • Does the stock/ETF you want to capture the dividend on have a active option market?
    • If the options are thinly traded, or if appropriate strike prices are not available this strategy does not work
  • Are you set up for at least the first level (simplest level) of options trading in your brokerage account?
    • If your account is not an IRA then you will need to have a margin account.  Don’t worry, there are no interest charges or chance of a margin call with this strategy (assuming you don’t buy the stock on margin)
    • This first level of option authorization usually allows covered calls and simple purchases / sales of puts and calls
    • Typically you can do these sorts of trades in a Roth / Traditional IRA — however you do need to apply for that capability if you don’t have it already
  • Are you willing to learn about combo orders? These are orders that simultaneously fill your stock and options orders at a not-to-exceed price
    • These orders are prudent to use in fast moving markets, and when bid/ask prices are widely separated
    • Combo orders are not necessary if bid/ask spreads are small and if you are willing to do fast sequential market orders

Extra Credit

  • Can you make your investment in an IRA account?
    • If so, this dividend strategy is more attractive, because you can defer taxes on any gains

Pass the test?  In this post I’ll give some screening criteria for good positions and the basic setup of this dividend capture strategy.

Dividend Capture Strategies

 
Sunday, December 12th, 2010 | Vance Harwood
 

In trying to capture dividends there is no free lunch. In fact, since Wall street is involved, the best you can hope for is an affordable lunch. I have looked at, and tried quite a few approaches—most of which don’t work, but I have found one approach that does work with some ETFs. Ironically you don’t actually collect the dividend most of the time, but you can collect an amount similar to the dividend-with a reasonable amount of risk.

Anyone with money can capture a dividend—you buy the stock (or ETF) before the ex-dividend date and hold it until the ex-dividend date. The challenge is to close out your position with a profit that is worth the risk. Typically the stock will drop by about the dividend amount when it starts trading on the ex-dividend day, but if the stock has a generally up day your overall profit can be better than the dividend. You lose money if the stock drops by more than the dividend amount (ignoring commissions)—and if the market goes bad you can lose many months worth of dividends in a hurry.

There are two ways to deal with this kind of risk, you can try to predict the future, or you can hedge. If you are any good at predicting the future then you don’t need to be messing around with dividends, you should just be buying and selling based on your predictions. With hedging you try to reduce, or better yet eliminate your risk by also investing in something that moves in the opposite direction of the stock so that the price movements cancel out. Some high quality hedges for a stock or ETF:

  1. Sell the stock short
  2. Sell a stock short that very closely tracks the stock you own (e.g., IVV for SPY)
  3. Buy an ETF that has an inverse relationship to your stock  (this can be done in IRAs, they don’t allow shorting)

 

Hedges that can reduce your risk, but only provide medium protection include:

  1. Shorting the general market or industry sector that your stock is in
  2. Buying inverse ETFs for the general market or industry sector
  3. Use stock options with strike prices close to the current market price
  4. Use stock futures (sell futures)

 

The folks on Wall Street aren’t about to let you get away with any sort of risk free profit, even if it is only a few tenths of a percent.   The high quality hedges above don’t work at all (see here) for dividend capture.   The medium level hedges don’t eliminate the downside risk and introduce the possibility that an upside move by your stock might be more than wiped out by an even stronger downside move by your hedge.

 

I have used one approach that offers a reasonable payoff, with reasonable risk—using deep-in-the-money stock option calls to capture the dividend amount.   More about this in this post.

2012 Ex-dividend and Pay date information for AGZ, CFT, CIU, EMB, GBF, GVI, MBB, MUB, NYF SUM, MUAA, MUAB, MUAC, MUAD, MUAE, MUAG

 
Sunday, March 11th, 2012 | Vance Harwood
 

The 2012 Ex-Dividend and Pay Date  information below is based on Ishares distribution schedule,

Ex-Dividend Date:   1-Feb-12    1-Mar-12    2-Apr-12     1-May-12   1-Jun-12   2-Jul-12   1-Aug-12   4-Sep-12   1-Oct-12   1-Nov-12   3-Dec-12   26-Dec-12

Pay/ Distribution Date:  7-Jan-12   7-Feb-12   9-Mar-12  7-Apr-12  7-May-12    07-Jun-12    9-Jul-12   7-Aug-12   10-Sep-12   5-Oct-12   7-Nov-12   7-Dec-12   02-Jan-13

AGZ      iShares Barclays Agency Bond Fund (AGZ)
CFT      iShares Barclays Credit Bond Fund (CFT)
CIU      iShares Barclays Intermediate Credit Bond Fund (CIU)
EMB     iShares JPMorgan USD Emerging Markets Bond Fund (EMB)
GBF      iShares Barclays Government/Credit Bond Fund (GBF)
GVI      iShares Barclays Intermediate Government/Credit Bond Fund (GVI)
MUAA iShares 2012 S&P AMT-Free Municipal Series (MUAA)
MUAB iShares 2013 S&P AMT-Free Municipal Series (MUAB)
MUAC iShares 2014 S&P AMT-Free Municipal Series (MUAC)
MUAD iShares 2015 S&P AMT-Free Municipal Series (MUAD)
MUAE iShares 2016 S&P AMT-Free Municipal Series (MUAE)
MUAG iShares 2017 S&P AMT-Free Municipal Series (MUAF)
MBB     iShares Barclays MBS Bond Fund (MBB)
MUB    iShares S&P National AMT-Free Municipal Bond Fund (MUB)
NYF     iShares S&P New York AMT-Free Municipal Bond Fund (NYF)
SUB      iShares S&P Short Term National AMT-Free Municipal Bond Fund (SUB)

Looking for ex-dividend information for other ETFs?   Check this page.

Schwab stealth dividends — can you guess the pattern?

 
Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010 | Vance Harwood
 

Update

Schwab posted their 2010 ex-dividend / distribution dates for their no-fee ETFs here.

Original post…

Schwab’s new no-commission ETFs went ex-dividend last Monday, March 22nd.   The distribution date is 26-March–only four days later!   I had guessed Schwab would align with the quarterly iShares funds ex-dividends, but apparently they have decided to go it alone with apparently semi-random, unannounced ex-dividend dates.  The dividends to be paid were posted recently.  The distributions:

SCHA   $0.07

SCHB   $0.11

SCHG  $0.05

SCHV  $0.14

SCHX   $0.10  (I had guessed $0.12)

The two ex-dividend dates we have since the funds started, 23-Dec-09, a Thursday, and 22-Mar-10, a Monday, don’t suggest a pattern I can see.   Ex-dividend dates tend to follow a week / day of week pattern (e.g., Thursday on the 3rd week of the month), or a day of the month (e.g., 1st of the month unless it is not a business day).   The December date was the 17th business day, and the March date was the 16th, so not a usable pattern there either.  Guess we will have to wait another quarter to get another data point.   In the meantime I’m going to guess and predict the next Schwab fund ex-dividend date will be on 21-June-2010.

Dividend History

 
Wednesday, December 28th, 2011 | Vance Harwood
 

I’ve recently created a tool for generating dividend history reports on any of the iShares and SPDR ETFs.

You can access it here: Dividend History Report.

Links to a few selected pre-generated reports are shown below:

DIA dividend history

DVY dividend history

IWM dividend history

JNK dividend history

LQD dividend history

SPY dividend history

TIP dividend history

XLP dividend history

XLU dividend history

If you need dividend history on a non iShare / SPDR fund or stock then I recommend the DividendInvestor site.

 

 

Equity option expiration dates

 
Sunday, October 23rd, 2011 | Vance Harwood
 

Next CBOE Weeklys listings and expiration

The expiration dates for 2011 / 2012 Equity options are:

Monthly expiration dates
Last trade Friday PM
September 17th, 2011
October 22nd, 2011
November 19th, 2011
December 17th, 2011
January 21st, 2012
Feburary 18th, 2012
March 17th, 2012
April 21st, 2012
May 19th, 2012
June, 16th, 2012
July 21st, 2012
August 18th, 2012
September 22nd, 2012
October 20th, 2012
November 17th, 2012
December 22nd, 2012
Source:   OCC and CBOE option expiration calendars

SPY March 2010 Dividend $0.48038

 
Thursday, January 13th, 2011 | Vance Harwood
 

For the next SPY ex-dividend date and estimated dividend go here.

SPDR’s 19-Mar-2010 dividend update reports SPY’s March 2010 dividend as $0.48  (I had estimated $0.52).  The pay date will be 30-April-2010.   The ex-dividend date is today, 19-March-2010.

SPY dividend capture strategies that don’t work…

 
Tuesday, March 8th, 2011 | Vance Harwood
 

Some SPY dividend capture strategies I don’t recommend:

1. Sell SPY short right before closing the day before ex-dividend

  • Rationale:  Securities tend to drop by about the dividend amount when trading begins (pre-open trading)
  • Problem:   The buyer that bought the stock from you deserves the dividend and the loaner that loaned you the stock you sold (probably unknowingly), deserves the dividend too.  Two dividends, one share of stock–you make up the difference.  You will have the dividend amount subtracted from your account.

2.  Create a covered call position with SPY right before ex-dividend by buying SPY and selling  deep in the money calls

  • Rationale:  You own the stock, so you will collect the dividend.  The value of the short calls moves in direct opposition to the value of SPY, so you have a near perfect hedge, with very little risk from anything other than a total market meltdown.   The options expire the next day after the ex-dividend date so the position automatically closes itself out the weekend after the ex-dividend.
  • Problem:  If the premium value of the SPY calls is significantly lower than the dividend amount (which is a certainty with deep in the money calls near expiration) your calls will very likely  be assigned.  Your stock will be called away, and you will not collect the dividend.  Unless you received some premium when you created your covered call position (if your breakeven price is  less than the strike price)   you have just paid commissions for nothing.

3.  Buy SPY and sell the same number of IVV (the iShares version of SPY) short

  • Rationale:  Since IVV goes ex-dividend a few days after SPY there is time to buy back IVV before its dividend is due.  SPY and IVV both track the S&P index, pretty much exactly, so the long and short position are perfectly hedged.
  • Problem: The value of IVV is tied to the S&P 500 index , not SPY.  Since the S&P 500 is not influenced by SPY going ex-dividend IVV doesn’t mirror the SPY move.  After SPY goes ex-dividend there is an increased offset between SPY and IVV that doesn’t go away until IVV goes ex-dividend the next week.   At that point the two ETFs go back to their usual offset with IVV typically being  ~$0.40 higher.   Your losses in your short IVV position cancel out your dividend gains from holding SPY.  Only your broker is happy.

SPY Dividend History

 
Wednesday, December 28th, 2011 | Vance Harwood
 

SPY, said by some to be the most liquid single security in the world,  goes ex-dividend four times a year.  See this post for the next ex-dividend date and an estimate of the dividend amount.   You must buy SPY at least by the end of market on Thursday, the day before ex-dividend, to be eligible for the dividend.

Below is SPY’s  dividend history over the last 5 years:

If you would like the dividend history for another security, see this post.

 

Ex-dividend and Pay date information for: DIA

 
Sunday, March 11th, 2012 | Vance Harwood
 

The 2012 Ex-Dividend and Pay Date  information below is based on SPDR distribution schedule,

DIA SPDR  Dow Diamond

Ex-Dividend

20-Jan-12  17-Feb-12 16-Mar-12   20-Apr-12   18-May-12   15-Jun-12   20-Jul-12   17-Aug-12   21-Sep-12   19-Oct-12   16-Nov-12   21-Dec-12  27-Dec-12 (potential excise dist)

Pay Dates

13-Feb-12   12-Mar-12   16-Apr-12   14-May-12   11-Jun-12   16-Jul-12   13-Aug-12  17-Sep-12   15-Oct-12   13-Nov-12   17-Dec-12   14-Jan-13  14-Jan

DIA dividend history

DIA Dividend History

Dividend capture approaches

Looking for ex-dividend information for other ETFs?   Check this page.