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The Double-Digit Bear Market Income Secret
By Tom Dyson
December 29, 2008

Last summer, I went to visit Iowa Telecom.

Iowa Telecom serves 417 communities in the countryside – 90% have fewer than 2,000 people. It avoids towns. The largest town it operates in is Newton, Iowa... population 15,000.

It has no competition... and it never will. There is simply no scenario where it would be worthwhile for a competitor to build a network to serve towns with three farmhouses. This is Iowa Telecom's "moat." Plus, only 28% of Iowa Telecom customers are businesses, so the company doesn't have much exposure to business downturns.


Iowa Telecom has all the qualities of a safe dividend stock. It cannot expand, it pays almost no taxes, and it cranks out the same cash-flow numbers every quarter. Management pays out almost all its cash flow in dividends. When I first went to visit the company, it was paying a 9% dividend.

But here's the kicker. After I'd toured the premises, met management, and studied the company finances in the boardroom, I got into a casual conversation with the chief financial officer. He gave me the best indication that Iowa Telecom would make a good dividend investment...

He said to me, "You know I just bought a farm. And I overpaid for it. Well, if you want to know what I think of our dividend, put it this way: I'm depending on the cash flow from our dividend to pay for my farm."

Over the last six months, Iowa Telecom's stock price has fallen 23%. And it's still paying the same 40-cent dividend payment. The yield is now 12%.

Now, even though the stock is down 23%, my readers have only lost 9% on the position. That's because we've made 7% by collecting dividends and another 8% by selling call options against our position. That's 15% income in seven months... during the worst bear market in 30 years.

When you sell call options against a stock, you're running what the pros call a "covered call" strategy. You sell the potential future upside in the stock price to another investor in return for a large fee. They call this fee an "option premium." By collecting this option premium, it's easy to double or triple the income you receive from your stock positions. Your downside hasn't changed, except now you have the option premiums to pad your returns.

If you believe your stock has huge upside potential, you wouldn't want to sell the upside potential to another investor. But with Iowa Telecom, I couldn't see any reason for its stock price to rise. It pays out all its profits and has no expansion plans. It's like a bond, in other words. I was happy to sell the upside potential.

The current market is perfect for using a covered call strategy. Option premiums are extremely high thanks to the volatility (although they are falling), and America's strongest blue-chip stocks are selling at generational lows, paying the highest dividend yields since the 1980s.

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These companies are safe. But as long as we're mired in recession, I don't believe they have much short-term upside. So I'm happy to sell this upside away to eager option buyers for high premiums.

I call this strategy the double-digit bear market income secret.

If you'd like to learn more about covered calls, give your broker a call and ask him to explain the trade. It's the only way to earn safe income in a bear market...

Good investing,

Tom

Editor's note: Tom Dyson is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Tom Dyson.

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The ruble fell to a record low against the euro as Russia devalued the currency for the 12th time in seven weeks after the government forecast its first budget deficit in a decade.

The managed currency weakened 2.5 percent to 41.6870 per euro at 12:56 p.m. in Moscow, the lowest since the European currency started trading in 1999. It fell 0.7 percent to 29.1884 versus the dollar, the lowest since Oct. 2004.

The ruble has fallen 19 percent against the basket since Russia's invasion of Georgia in August, to 34.8170. That five-day war, the global credit squeeze and plunging oil prices have led investors to pull more than $200 billion out of Russian investments in the last five months, according to BNP Paribas SA.

Russia is expecting to run its first budget deficit since 1999 next year, of as much as 2 trillion rubles ($69 billion), because of lower-than-expected oil prices, Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin said on Dec. 27.

– Bloomberg

China has started filling tanks at its largest oil reserve, taking advantage of tumbling world crude prices, state media reported Thursday.

Analysts said the ongoing slump in the global oil market, with crude prices falling 78 percent since hitting record highs above 147 dollars per barrel in July, made a good opening for China to expand its crude imports and reserves.

The aim of the reserves is to guarantee supply in times of need as the nation's a growing economy demands ever-more energy to fuel the factories that supply many of the world's consumers with manufactured goods.

Strategic oil reserves in the country are expected to reach 101.9 million barrels by the end of this year and rise to 145.9 million barrels in 2010, with 511.9 million barrels a long-term goal, Xinhua said.

A net importer of oil since 1993, China imported around 1.2 billion barrels of crude in 2007, up 12.4 percent from the previous year.

– Agence France Presse

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