An alternative to a pure index fund, a yield tilt fund diversifies its holdings among a universe of stocks that is “tilted” in the direction of higher yield, such as the high-yield stocks that comprise the S&P 500. Yield tilt funds are based on the assertion that, since dividend income is taxed at higher rates, the market must compensate for this taxation by providing higher returns for the high-yield segment of the market. If this assertion is true, tax-exempt investors could benefit from this market inefficiency by investing in high-yield stock
It is a type of mutual fund that allocates capital as a standard index, by replicating the holdings of a specified stock index, such as the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (S&P 500), except that the fund weights its holdings towards stocks that offer higher dividend yields. Stocks with higher dividend yields are given a greater portfolio weighting, making them represent more of the fund’s portfolio than they otherwise would in the standard index.
The rationale behind the creation of yield tilt index funds is based on the fact that dividend payments issued to shareholders can be subject to “double taxation”, meaning that they are taxed once at the corporate level and then once again at the shareholder level.
Due to this effect, some investors contend that the market must value the share prices of high-yield stocks at somewhat of a discount to other stocks, so as to provide an increased return on high-yield stocks in order to compensate for the negative tax effects. The theory is that an investor who is able to purchase a yield tilt index fund in a tax-sheltered investment account may be able to outperform the index, since they receive the supposed valuation benefit but are sheltered from taxes on the dividends they receive.