Summary
- A simple framework to retire on passive income from a $2 million portfolio.
- I detail how I would balance diversification with current income, dividend growth, and long-term capital appreciation.
- I also discuss how to balance ETFs and individual stocks, bonds, and preferreds when building a dividend portfolio.
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For many, dividend investing is viewed as a bit of a shortcut to being able to retire, but a higher percentage yield than the 4% rule indicates you would be able to. For example, investing in durable dividend growth stocks like Enbridge (ENB
However, some investors who do not have a large nest egg have to reach for even higher yields and therefore put their portfolio at significant risk of loss. While you can generate a sustainable 7 to 8% yield if you manage your portfolio very carefully by actively monitoring your holdings and mixing in fixed income securities to add diversification and safety, you are still taking on a higher risk profile than if you could retire on a lower yield, all else being equal. This is common sense, because the lower the risk a security is, normalizing for a constant growth rate, the market is generally going to price the yield lower, as investors would rather have a low-risk 7% yield than a high-risk 7% yield and will therefore bid up the stock price of that lower-risk stock, thereby pushing its yield down.
The $2 Million Nest Egg Advantage
With that being said, in today’s article, I will discuss how I would approach retiring on dividends with a $2 million portfolio. The big advantage of retiring on $2,000,000 versus $1,000,000 (which I discussed here), aside from simply having more money, is that you can optimize your portfolio more towards risk mitigation and dividend growth, versus simply having to chase a certain yield threshold. At the $2,000,000 level, you have a lot more flexibility because a 4% yield alone is enough to get you to $80,000 a year. If generated through dividends, as opposed to simply liquidating shares, you reduce some of your sequence of returns risk, making it an even lower-risk proposition than simply retiring on an index fund and selling shares at regular intervals. Of course, for some retirees, $80,000 would not be enough, but for those who have already paid off their home, have some social security, and live relatively frugally, $80,000 could go a long way.
Building the Core
The Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (SCHD
On top of that, you really have no reason to need to invest in covered call ETFs like the JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (JEPI
The Tax-Advantaged Yield Booster
Of course, with a large percentage of your portfolio allocated to ETFs like SCHD and SCHG or similar funds, you do need to make up that yield somewhere to still get to your target of 4%. This is where picking individual stocks in sectors not covered in these two funds comes into play. One of the best places to go, especially in a taxable account, is midstream MLPs because of the tax-deferred nature of the distributions (provided, of course, that you are willing to deal with a K-1 tax form). Names like Enterprise Products Partners (EPD
If you wish to avoid the K-1 tax form instead, you can invest in ETFs like the Alerian MLP ETF (AMLP
REITs, Preferreds, and Infrastructure to Round Out the Portfolio
Meanwhile, REITs (VNQ
- Triple net lease REITs like NNN REIT (NNN
and Agree Realty (ADC , which combine an over 5% current yield with inflation-matching or beating dividend growth that is churned out consistently year after year - You can also invest in residential REITs, which also offer yields near 5% via stocks like Invitation Homes (INVH
or Mid-America Apartment Communities (MAA , along with consistent dividend growth, recession resistance, and strong balance sheets, just like triple net lease REITs provide.
The infrastructure space (UTF
These are not as high-yielding as MLPs are, but they still yield well above 4% and therefore can help you get to that 4% aggregate yield level while providing further diversification.
Investment-Grade Bonds, Preferreds, and the Sleep-Well-at-Night Finish
Additionally, instead of having to chase risky or high-yield bonds, you can invest in investment-grade bonds that yield in the 6–7% range and even, in some cases, the 8% annualized range, as well as some investment-grade preferreds that also offer 7–8% yields. One of these that I like is the investment-grade preferreds offered by BIP (BIP.PR.A)(BIP.PR.B), as it has a small spot in the capital stack, and it’s backed by a defensive business model with low corporate-level debt. Therefore, it should be able to sustain its preferred 7%+ yield for years to come through all sorts of macro environments.
The other beauty of this approach is that you really do not need to go into BDCs (BIZD
Of course, you also may want some exposure to TIPS and short-term treasuries (SGOV
Why This $2 Million Blueprint Could Be Your Most Powerful Path to Financial Freedom
Putting this all together, you can have a very nice diversified portfolio across:
- A broad swath of blue-chip dividend growth stocks via SCHD
- A broad swath of blue-chip tech growth stocks via SCHG
Both funds hardly pay anything in fees and then round out the portfolio with more inflation protection and a higher yield by investing in a cross-section of real asset businesses across:
- The midstream infrastructure
- REIT
- Diversified infrastructure and asset manager spaces
Throw in some commodities, especially in the precious metals department, and perhaps a tactical position in bonds and treasuries to help protect your liquidity via a short-term cash position. This overall should comfortably generate a 4% annualized yield with inflation protection, dividend growth, and long-term capital appreciation potential that should easily offset inflation’s forces over time. This thereby enables you to sleep well at night while being able to live comfortably off your nest egg and even generate long-term appreciation that you can pass on to heirs. Here is a sample of how it could look:
| Security | Allocation | Yield |
| SCHD | 30% | 3.5% |
| SCHG | 15% | 0.4% |
| MLPs | 10% | 7.5% |
| REITs | 5% | 5.0% |
| Infrastructure | 5% | 5.0% |
| BAM | 2.5% | 4.5% |
| MAIN | 2.5% | 7.0% |
| Bonds/Preferreds | 15% | 7.0% |
| Precious Metals (ETFs + Leases) | 15% | 2.0% |
| Total | 100% | 4.0% |
Of course, the key to being able to do this with $2,000,000 requires that you live a somewhat frugal lifestyle or, at the very least, live in an area where the cost of living is not sky-high, while also having your mortgage paid off and having Social Security to help supplement your passive income. However, for many, this is a reality, or at least a very achievable reality. For those who fit into this camp, this may be the most prudent approach because it minimizes your downside risk while still enabling you to live well off of your portfolio and also sleep well during market crashes.
The types of real asset dividend growth investments that fit the categories detailed in this article, as well as some of the bonds and preferreds that are mentioned, are the types of securities that we focus on identifying and opportunistically investing in our total return outperforming and below-market beta portfolios at High Yield Investor.