Exchange-traded funds have earned their place in retirement portfolios as they are diversified, low-cost, and easy to manage. For retirees who don’t want to spend their mornings picking stocks, ETFs like the Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF (NYSE:SCHD) or the Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (NYSE:VYM) offer instant access to hundreds of dividend-paying companies in a single holding. It’s the simplest path to income, and for many investors, this is where the conversation ends.
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Schwab Dividend ETF (SCHD) 3.32% yield, Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (VYM) 2.28%, Enterprise Products Partners (EPD) 5.92%, Realty Income (O) 4.91%, Procter & Gamble (PG) 2.67%, PepsiCo (PEP) 3.47%, JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF (JEPI).
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Broad dividend ETFs dilute strong performers with weaker holdings, so adding individual high-yield stocks to an ETF base boosts income and growth.
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But simplicity comes with a cost that most retirees never examine: when you own a broad dividend ETF, you’re holding every company in that fund’s index, including those with thin margins, unstable cash flow, or payout ratios already stretched. The fund averages everything together, which means the strong dividend growers in the portfolio are being diluted by the weaker ones. The result is a yield that’s lower than what you’d earn by selectively owning the best companies directly, and a growth rate that’s slower than the top individual payers can deliver on their own.
This doesn’t mean that ETFs are wrong for most investors, on the contrary, but it might mean they’re incomplete for retirees who want to maximize their income without taking on unnecessary risk. Adding a layer of carefully chosen individual dividend stocks alongside your ETF holdings can boost yield, increase income growth, and give you a level of control over your cash flow that no fund can replicate. For a generation of investors who were taught to avoid stock picking entirely, this is the income layer they’re leaving on the table.
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The Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF holds over 570 stocks and currently yields 2.28% with a $3.50 annual payout per share. Additionally, you can look at the Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF (NYSE:SCHD) is more selective with just 101 holdings, but still yields only 3.32% with a $1.05 annual payout. These are both solid funds, but the yields reflect the average across all holdings, including companies yielding 1% or less that are dragging them down.