If you own the iShares International Select Dividend ETF (NASDAQ:IDV | IDV Price Prediction) for income, the question is whether the fat distributions can hold up while the dollar wobbles, tariffs threaten European exporters, and U.S. Treasuries pay 4.4% risk-free. IDV currently yields about 4.7% from a basket of 100 high-dividend international stocks, and the fund has rallied 45% over the past year. The short answer on dividend safety: the income stream is durable, but bumpy in ways U.S. dividend investors often forget about.
How IDV actually pays you
IDV tracks the Dow Jones EPAC Select Dividend Index, a screen of high-yielders from non-U.S. developed markets. Its money comes from real dividends paid by real companies across the UK, Australia, France, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Spain, Sweden, Hong Kong, Canada, and roughly nine other developed markets. The portfolio leans heavily on consumer goods, financials, and utilities, with names like British American Tobacco and Mercedes-Benz anchoring the income.
The fund launched in June 2007, charges roughly 0.5% in expenses, and runs about $6.3 billion in assets. That fee is meaningfully higher than U.S. dividend ETFs, the price of single-ticker access to overseas payers.
Why the quarterly checks look uneven
Look at recent payments and the variability jumps off the page. In 2025 IDV paid about $0.19 in March, $0.79 in June, $0.38 in September, and $0.59 in December. The March 2026 distribution came in at just about $0.20. That swing is normal here. European companies tend to pay one large annual dividend plus a smaller interim, so June and December checks run heavier than March and September. Compared with 2024’s full year, the trailing payout still grew at roughly 10% clip in 2025.
What can actually shrink the distribution
Three risks matter, in order. First, currency: IDV does not hedge, so a stronger dollar mechanically translates fewer pounds, euros, and Australian dollars into smaller U.S. payments, even if underlying companies never cut. Second, payout policy abroad: many European and Australian holdings tie dividends directly to a percentage of earnings, which means a cyclical earnings dip flows straight through to the distribution within a year. U.S. holders used to firms that defend their dividends through a recession often misread this as a “cut” when it is just the formula working. Third, tariffs and geopolitics: the VIX spiked to almost 31 in late March on tariff worries before settling back to about 17, a reminder that European exporters and Asian financials carry real headline risk.
What is reassuring is the engine room. The portfolio trades at roughly 10x earnings, meaning these distributions are funded by genuine earnings rather than debt. Utilities and consumer staples holdings provide the kind of regulated or recession-resistant cash flow that supports payouts in a slowdown.
Total return is finally cooperating
For years, IDV’s critique was simple: decent yield, lagging total return. That story has changed. The fund is up 79% over five years and 14% year to date, with Seeking Alpha calling it a 17-year range breakout in January 2026. A weaker dollar and rock-bottom international valuations are doing the work the dividend alone could not.
The verdict
IDV’s distribution is safe in the sense that matters most: it is funded by genuine corporate earnings from a diversified, defensively tilted set of developed-market payers with no leverage or option-writing tricks behind it. It is lumpy, though. Quarterly checks will swing 3x or 4x between the small and large quarters, and a dollar rally could shave the U.S.-dollar yield by several points in a year without any company actually cutting.
That makes IDV a fit for income investors who want geographic diversification and can tolerate lumpy, currency-translated payments. Anyone who needs a steady, U.S.-style quarterly check that grows in a straight line should pair it with a dividend-growth ETF or look at a currency-hedged international alternative instead.