Despite the hefty 3.8 percent dividend, Wall Street has indeed lost faith.
The shares pay a 3 percent dividend, or $12,000 a year.
In fact, the fund did pay a 375 percent dividend in its first half year.
The bank's dividend policy is to pay out 15 percent dividends per annum.
Money is given in exchange for preferred stock that pays a 9 percent dividend.
But even with all those problems, you might think that a 21 percent dividend would entice investors.
Though the company has yet to make a penny, it promises to pay an 8 percent dividend.
It pays a 2 percent dividend, he said, and has substantial cash flow.
The preferred stock will pay a 5 percent dividend and can be redeemed at the insistence of either party after five years.
By 1850, it had paid six percent dividends per month, for ten consecutive months.