Want Decades of Passive Income? Buy This Index Fund and Hold It Forever

Want Decades of Passive Income? Buy This Index Fund and Hold It Forever


If you’re looking for an ETF that’s capable of generating decades of consistent, predictable passive income, you’re looking for stocks capable of doing the same.

Sure, high-yielders might be able to produce more income, but there’s always the question of whether those yields are sustainable. An economic downturn could easily lead to some of those big payouts getting cut.

In my opinion, you want companies that have not only paid dividends for years but have also grown them. That demonstrates commitment and an ability to keep generating the cash flows and profits necessary to keep rewarding shareholders indefinitely.

That’s why the Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (NYSEMKT: VIG) is a great choice for long-term income. Granted, the current 1.6% yield probably isn’t going to get anybody too excited, but if your time horizon is decades and you want a portfolio that’s durable enough to get you there, VIG is worth a look.

Stacks of coins with a dollar sign.
Source: Getty Images.

VIG tracks the S&P U.S. Dividend Growers index. This index targets U.S. companies that have grown their annual dividend for at least 10 straight years, but it doesn’t include the top 25% of the highest-yielding stocks. Qualifying stocks are then weighted by market capitalization.

There are a couple of noteworthy things about this approach.

First, the elimination of the highest yields right off the bat improves portfolio quality. Some of these stocks could be referred to as “yield traps,” meaning that they’re high because of a falling share price, not improved financial performance. Those are the stocks that are vulnerable to cuts and below-average returns.

Second, that screen unfortunately also eliminates some genuine high-yielders. Some of the traditionally higher-yield sectors, including real estate, energy, and utilities, have minimal presence in VIG’s portfolio. Investors probably shouldn’t ever expect the Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF to be a source of significant income.

Third, the cap-weighting methodology produces a different portfolio composition from many of VIG’s peers. It essentially disregards dividend history, quality, and yield and simply gives the biggest companies the biggest weights. That becomes apparent when you see that VIG’s three largest holdings, Broadcom, Microsoft, and Apple, all have yields under 1%. That helps the fund’s growth profile, but it doesn’t help its income prospects.


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