Morgan Stanley EDD Raises Quarterly Dividend
Morgan Stanley Emerging Markets Domestic Debt Fund lifted its quarterly payout to $0.24 a share, with the shares going ex-dividend on June 30, 2026.
EDD — Morgan Stanley Emerging Markets Domestic Debt Fund, Inc.
Morgan Stanley Emerging Markets Domestic Debt Fund, Inc. (EDD) increased its quarterly dividend to $0.24 a share from $0.14, a 71.43% rise, with the shares going ex-dividend on Tuesday, June 30, 2026.
The closed-end fund, which trades under the ticker EDD, has a forward annual yield of 10.9% based on a share price of $5.78. Its annual dividend per share is $0.63, according to the locked dividend data for the event.
EDD is a Financial Services fund sponsored by Morgan Stanley Investment Management. The fund’s stated objective is to seek a high level of current income, with long-term capital appreciation as a secondary objective, by investing in emerging-markets domestic debt, according to Morgan Stanley’s fund page and CEFConnect’s fund profile. CEFConnect classifies the fund in taxable fixed income, with an emerging-market income focus.
Dividend Context
The increase extends EDD’s dividend growth streak to three consecutive years. The fund’s recent record is not uninterrupted, however: it previously cut its dividend in 2025, a reminder that closed-end fund distributions can change with portfolio income, market conditions and board policy.
Morgan Stanley’s fund disclosures note that closed-end fund distributions may include ordinary income, capital gains or return of capital, and that there is no assurance a fund will be able to maintain a distribution of a particular size. The firm also highlights risks tied to emerging-market debt, including currency, political, economic, interest-rate, credit and liquidity risks.
CEFConnect’s profile lists Morgan Stanley Investment Management as the fund sponsor and identifies the fund’s portfolio management team as Sahil Tandon, Brian Shaw and Patrick M. Campbell. Its portfolio information shows a debt-oriented strategy with significant exposure to government-related holdings, consistent with the fund’s emerging-market domestic debt mandate.
What It Means for Income Investors
For income-focused holders, the higher quarterly payout increases near-term cash income from EDD and pushes the fund’s forward annual yield into double digits. The event also adds to a short growth streak after the 2025 cut.
Still, the fund’s dividend safety score is 57 out of 100, with a C grade. That profile suggests investors tracking the payout should watch future distribution notices, portfolio income trends and any return-of-capital disclosures rather than treating the new rate as guaranteed.
Sources
See EDD's full dividend profile
Yield, payout, safety score, history and the next ex-dividend date.
View EDDMore dividend news

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