- BDCs continue to provide higher-than-average annualized returns (15% and higher) that will never be taxed if invested correctly in a Roth IRA.
- BDCs can be volatile and the best way to invest in these income vehicles is through dollar averaging purchases during the general market pullbacks.
- These returns will be compounding in your portfolio faster than typical investments assuming that you carefully choose the components.
- Investors should hold their more aggressive income-producing assets in Roth IRAs to grow these accounts given the IRS rules limiting contributions to $6,000/$7,000 annually.
- Higher quality BDCs are excellent "buy and hold" investments but to get the real bang for your buck it's better to "buy more on the dips."
For further details see:
How I Built A Tax-Free Portfolio With 15% Annualized Returns