Jasmine Birtles
Your money-making expert. Financial journalist, TV and radio personality.

If you’re in your 20s or 30s and thinking about investing, this one’s for you. You might not picture a high-yield, global dividend ETF when you think “growth,” but hear me out, because Global X SuperDividend ETF (ticker SDIV) offers a unique twist that could fit your long-term mindset.
Also read: How to invest in your 30s
SDIV is a passively managed ETF that aims to replicate an index made up of roughly 100 of the highest-yielding dividend-paying stocks around the world.
Here are the main features:
So in short: pick 100 global high-dividend stocks, distribute income monthly, give you access via one ETF. Pretty simple!
Before you get excited and put all of your money into this ETF, it’s important to be aware of a few caveats.
Analysts and commentary have flagged concerns: despite the juicy yield, SDIV has underperformed many broad market indices, and the yield may reflect higher risk rather than safe income.
However, other analysts emphasise high income potential, monthly payouts, and global exposure.
So the “news flavour” is two-sided: big yield + interesting monthly income feature vs higher risk + mixed long-term growth. That actually opens a good door for you if you’re younger and have time on your side.
Okay, here’s where I lean into the opinion part. Yes, SDIV comes with caveats. But for the 20s-30s crowd, it might offer something attractive.
If you’re 25 or 35, you’ve (hopefully) got decades ahead until retirement. That means you can take more risk, ride out volatility, and benefit from reinvested income. A high-yield global ETF can be part of that.
The monthly dividends mean you can reinvest them, compounding over time.
Many young investors default to “tech growth” or “FAANG stocks.” That’s fine. But adding a global dividend strategy adds a different flavour: income + global exposure + different sectors (like real estate, energy, financials) which may behave differently. SDIV gives you that mix.
You don’t need to pick 100 individual high-yield stocks. SDIV lets you buy one fund. It’s passive. It’s monthly.
For someone building their portfolio and maybe feeling a bit intimidated by “investing,” that’s a plus.
While dividends alone aren’t the same as pure growth, reinvesting them over decades is growth. If you take the monthly payout, reinvest it, you’re effectively letting your money work harder.
For someone starting early, that can be huge.
So: ideal if you have spare monthly savings, or an amount you can invest and leave alone for years.
No investment is perfect. Here are a few things to watch out for if you choose to invest.
If I were in my 20s or 30s, putting together an investment plan for the next 30-40 years, I’d seriously consider SDIV as one piece of that plan.
It wouldn’t be my only fund, and I’d pair it with broad market/low-cost ETFs (global equities, maybe sector growth, etc.). But the combination of global exposure + monthly income + simplicity is appealing.
For younger investors who worry “Am I missing out? Am I too late?” this kind of “income + growth” fund is a great option!
Disclaimer: MoneyMagpie is not a licensed financial advisor and therefore information found here including opinions, commentary, suggestions or strategies are for informational, entertainment or educational purposes only. This should not be considered as financial advice. Anyone thinking of investing should conduct their own due diligence.
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