Quick reading
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Amplify Natural Resources Dividend Income ETF (NDIV): Up 35% YTD with monthly distributions returning approximately 5%.
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The NDIV’s outperformance depends largely on gold miners, particularly Agnico Eagle, benefiting from the strength of the bullion rally.
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Oil prices below $80 per barrel would restrict dividend coverage and significantly compress monthly NDIV payments.
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Amplify Natural Resources Dividend Income ETF (NYSEARCA:NDIV) is one of those funds that rarely shows up on performance league tables, but quietly does exactly what its design promises: combine an international penchant for natural resources with a consistent monthly distribution. The problem it aims to solve is simple. Investors who want exposure to commodities and hard assets often face two unattractive options: take advantage of a single country’s volatile energy investments or accept the low returns of broad stock indices. NDIV combines global names in mining, materials and industrial cash flow into one monthly income stream.
The numbers behind the title are the story. NDIV stock is around $35, up 29% year to date and up 40% over the past year. Compare that with the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA:SPY), which is up just 4% year to date, and the quiet outperformance is evident.
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On the income side, NDIV has paid monthly distributions totaling about $0.70 per share through April, with the latest March payment alone amounting to $0.30. That run rate against a $35 share price puts the residual yield comfortably in the 5% range. Investor reception has been mixed: Fans like the monthly cadence and international diversification, while critics point out that the 1% expense ratio is high for a fund whose performance depends heavily on commodity beta.
The macro factor: commodity prices in oil and precious metals
The main driver of NDIV over the next 12 months is the underlying commodity price, with oil at the top of the watch list. WTI crude oil is near $100 per barrel after a strong rally in April, putting it in the 96th percentile for the past 12 months. The 12-month average sits at just $68, so the current price is directly fueling elevated cash flows for energy and resource producers.
The specific trigger to watch out for: If WTI falls back below the $80 level, dividend coverage on energy and mining holdings quickly shrinks, and the NDIV distribution math becomes more difficult. The cleanest place to monitor this is the EIA’s Weekly Oil Status Report, which is published every Wednesday, along with FRED’s daily WTI series. The historical precedent is instructive. When oil plunged from $114 in early April to $80 in two weeks, natural resource funds across the board gave up gains before recovering. A repeat would pressure the NAV and likely compress the variable monthly NDIV payments.