Hatteras Financial: A “Goldilocks” Situation Creates A Safe 17% Dividend

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Jun 10, 2010
I know the promise of 17% interest – safely – is ridiculous…

You should be skeptical. Interest rates that high must be either:

  1. Not possible (a lie of some sort is hiding in there).
  2. Or in an extremely risky investment.
You should be even more skeptical about rates that high in today’s world… at a time when your bank is paying you less than 1% on your deposits.

But I assure you, what I’ll share with you today is real and very safe… It’s all thanks to government foolishness…

Today’s idea is from one of the most foolish and costly government guarantees ever… the U.S. government backstopping the majority of American home mortgages.Government Foolishness: Backstopping American Home Mortgages

You might not be aware of it, but the U.S. government guarantees most mortgages in America. In other words, if a homeowner doesn’t pay his mortgage, it’s the government’s problem.

The government guarantees bankers and investors won’t be at risk. It does this by buying mortgages from banks. It’s a dumb deal for the government, but a brilliant deal for the banks and investors. And it means we can collect 17% interest, safely. Let me explain…

Bankers are smart… They try to only write mortgages they can immediately dump off on the government. What does the government do with the thousands of home mortgages it has bought? It packages them up and – importantly for our story here – it adds a 100% government guarantee… Then it sells those packages back to the banks.

I hope you can see it… These packages of government-guaranteed home mortgages are easy money for banks and investors.

Hatteras Financial: Investing in Gov’t Guaranteed Mortgage Packages

Hatteras Financial (HTS, Financial) is a simple business. It only invests in these 100% government-guaranteed mortgage packages.

Thanks to the Federal Reserve cutting short-term interest rates to near zero, Hatteras can borrow money at the lowest rates in its history. It pays just 1.5% interest to borrow money. And it can invest it in mortgages that are guaranteed by the government at a much higher rate (near 4%). So right now, Hatteras is making a fortune…

Analysts expect Hatteras will earn a profit of $4.70 per share in 2010 on its simple business of investing in 100% government-guaranteed mortgages. Hatteras, by law, pays out basically all of its earnings in the form ofdividends. Based on its current share price of $28, that’s a 17% dividend yield – all from boring government-guaranteed mortgages.

Hatteras is legitimately earning and paying out huge dividends by doing two simple things:

  • First, thanks to the Fed, it is borrowing money for next to nothing – about 1.5%.
  • Second, the company puts that money to work in government-guaranteed investments paying 4%.
This “Goldilocks” situation – where the government is accidentally helping on both halves of the Hatteras business model – will definitely not last forever. I think we have a year… possibly less.

Buy Hatteras Financial Now and Collect 17% Dividends

You see, if the Federal Reserve starts raising interest rates, then Hatteras’ cost of borrowing money will rise… so the interest “spread” will shrink… and therefore the dividends these companies can pay out will shrink.

But the Fed is too scared to act – the world economy is too fragile. I don’t think the Fed will raise rates for the rest of this year.

Buy Hatteras Financial right now… and collect 17% dividends. Plan on holding for a year.

I told my subscribers to buy the stock two weeks ago – when it was trading for under $25. They’re sitting pretty now… The stock is around $28 today. I told them to sell it if it gets near $32 per share. You should too. You’ll have a nice capital gain at that point AND you will have earned big dividends, safely.

A safe 17% dividend and the potential for a nice capital gain… only the government could accidentally create such a fantastic opportunity. Take advantage of it.

Good investing,

Steve Sjuggerud

http://www.investmentu.com/

Disclosure: The author does not own positions in any of the stocks mentioned.