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Harvest Canadian High Income Shares ETF (HHIC): Early Look at the Risk/Reward Trade-Off

Harvest Canadian High Income Shares ETF (HHIC):  An Early Look at Cashflow vs NAV By PtahX December 2025 Educational discussion only. Data points referenced as of Dec 12, 2025; holdings weights from late Nov 2025 fund disclosure. Overview HHIC is a Canadian equity income ETF designed to pay high monthly distributions by combining two explicit tools: a covered-call overlay (up to ~50% overwrite) and modest leverage (roughly ~25% exposure above NAV, about ~1.25× look-through). It’s a newer fund (launched Aug 2025), so the cleanest way to evaluate it right now is by structure and scenario behavior rather than a long track record. Key numbers (Dec 12, 2025) Price: ~13.45 NAV: ~13.47 (trading close to NAV) Distribution: 0.16 monthly Run-rate distribution: 1.92/year Indicated yield (simple): 1.92 / 13.45 ≈ 14.28% AUM: ~115M Management fee: 0.40% Risk rating: Medium This yield is compelling on its face, but with option-based products the important question is whether distributi...

Understanding Why Credit Is Safer Than Equity

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  Understanding Why Credit Is Safer Than Equity By PtahX October 25th, 2025 A Practical Guide to the Capital Stack and How to Think About Risk and Reward When you invest, you are deciding  where to stand in line to get paid . At the top of that line are  credit investors —the lenders. At the bottom are  equity investors —the owners. Every product in between, from senior loans to preferred shares, represents a different level of risk and reward. Understanding where your investment sits in this “capital stack” is the key to knowing what could happen in good times and bad. 1. Cash and Bonds — The Foundation of Safety Definition: Cash (savings, money markets) and bonds (corporate or government debt) are simple lending arrangements. You lend money with the expectation of getting it back with interest. Payment Priority: Creditors are first in line. They must be repaid before any shareholder receives a dollar. Pros: Predictable income from interest payments High priority in...

Learning BDCs: How to Invest in the Income Engine of the Real Economy

Learning BDCs: How to Invest in the Income Engine of the Real Economy By PtahX | October 2025 Business Development Companies (BDCs) are one of the least understood, most consistent income engines in the market. They don’t trend on CNBC or social media, but they quietly generate double-digit yields by financing real U.S. businesses. This guide breaks down what BDCs are, how they function, what separates quality from risk, and which names define the space today. 1. What Are BDCs? BDCs are public investment companies created by Congress in 1980 to support small and mid-sized U.S. businesses. They operate similarly to private-credit funds — lending money to companies that are too large for bank loans but too small for bond markets. In return, they collect interest and pass most of that income directly to shareholders as dividends. BDCs are required by law to: Distribute 90% or more of their taxable income to investors (which is why yields are high). Maintain leverage typically below...

Should we add KLIP to the Income Portfolio?

Should I Add KLIP to the Income Portfolio?  The KraneShares KWEB Covered Call Strategy ETF (KLIP) has caught attention with its impressive ~24% annualized yield, paid monthly, making it one of the highest-yielding equity ETFs in 2025. However, given the trade-offs and risks involved, I am considering a very conservative allocation—potentially 1% of my income portfolio. Here is a detailed exploration of KLIP and why I’m choosing a cautious approach. What Is KLIP and How Does It Generate Income? KLIP invests in top Chinese internet stocks through KWEB, an ETF that holds giants like Alibaba, Tencent, and JD.com, covering China’s booming digital economy. The fund employs a covered call strategy selling at-the-money call options on KWEB shares, generating premium income from the sector’s high volatility. This premium income drives the fund’s extraordinary yield. In 2025, KLIP capped its monthly distribution at 2% of NAV, reinvesting excess income to improve payout consistency and NA...

My Tactical Income Buys for October 2025: NCDL and PTMV

My Tactical Income Buys for October 2025: NCDL and PTMV October 2025 is a time for cautious but targeted moves in income investing. After reviewing the data and portfolio fit, I’m buying Nuveen Churchill Direct Lending Corp. (NCDL) and PennyMac’s baby bond PTMV . Below, I explain why I believe these are the right additions this month. Market Context The Federal Reserve continues to keep interest rates elevated, which supports floating-rate loans like those inside NCDL. Inflation is easing but uncertainty remains, so steady, sustainable income is critical. BDC stocks have sold off roughly 14% recently, while their net asset values have barely changed—a possible opportunity to buy quality income plays at attractive prices. Floating-rate loans benefit from these rate levels, while fixed coupon baby bonds like PTMV provide steady, reliable cash flow, making this a complementary pair. Why NCDL Is a Solid Income Play NCDL focuses on senior secured, floating-rate loans to mid-siz...

Business Development Companies (BDCs): Navigating Asset Sensitivity, Interest Rate Impact, and Evaluation Metrics

Business Development Companies (BDCs): Navigating Asset Sensitivity, Interest Rate Impact, and Evaluation Metrics Business Development Companies (BDCs) have become a popular investment vehicle for income-focused investors due to their attractive yields, often exceeding 10%. However, understanding their unique characteristics, including asset sensitivity to interest rates, credit risk, and dividend dynamics, is essential to navigating this high-yield asset class effectively. This blog post explores the core features of BDCs, how interest rate changes affect their earnings, and provides a practical guide on how to evaluate BDCs for investment. What Are Business Development Companies (BDCs)? BDCs are publicly traded firms that specialize in providing loans and equity capital to small- and mid-sized private companies, often those underserved by traditional banks. Operating with a mandate to earn income primarily from business loans, BDCs deliver most of their returns through dividends r...

NCDL: A Deep-Value BDC Hiding in Plain Sight

  NCDL: A Deep-Value BDC Hiding in Plain Sight October 11, 2025 Nuveen Churchill Direct Lending (NYSE: NCDL) has quietly slipped into one of the most compelling setups in the credit markets right now. The stock closed Friday at $13.32 , just above its 52-week low of $13.18, leaving it trading at a 25.7 % discount to its June 30 NAV of $17.92 . At that level, investors are buying an institutional-grade private-credit platform at three-quarters of book value — and collecting a 13.5 % yield while they wait. Current Picture Metric Latest Comment Share price $13.32 near the 52-week low NAV (6/30/25) $17.92 from Q2 2025 filing Discount to NAV –25.7 % among the widest in the sector Annual dividend $1.80 ($0.45 × 4) 13.5 % yield at current price NII / Dividend coverage ~1.02 × ($0.46 vs $0.45) thin but positive Leverage 1.26 × D/E normal for a BDC Rating BBB- / Stable (Fitch) affirmed July 17 2025 Portfolio mix ~90 % first-lien senior-s...