To build a passive income flow, I’d follow this Warren Buffett approach
Warren Buffett has set up passive income streams most people can only dream about. Our writer sees some practical lessons he too can apply.
Posted by Christopher Ruane
The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.
When investing, your capital is at risk. The value of your investments can go down as well as up and you may get back less than you put in.
The content of this article is provided for information purposes only and is not intended to be, nor does it constitute, any form of personal advice.
When it comes to passive income, few people have mastered it like Warren Buffett. The legendary investor’s company Berkshire Hathaway generates billions of pounds each year without doing anything for it beyond holding shares in blue-chip businesses such as Apple and Coca-Cola.
Although Buffett has far more resources at his disposal than any small private investor, I still believe the lessons from how he does what he does can be profitably applied even on a much more modest scale.
Sticking to a proven recipe
For example, Buffett is not really an innovator. Nor is he a trader, frequently jumping in and out of shares trying to make a quick profit.
Rather, he does a fairly simple thing – and does it well. He identifies companies he understands and thinks have excellent long-term commercial prospects and are trading at attractive share prices. Then he buys them and often holds them for the long term, hoping that if he has chosen correctly he will be rewarded with dividends, share price growth, or both.
That is a simple, but potentially very powerful, passive income idea.
Putting the theory into practice
When Buffett gets dividends, he does not use them to fund payouts to Berkshire shareholders. Instead, he reinvests them. That simple move can be used by small shareholders, by compounding their dividends.
Imagine I invested £300 each month in income shares and compounded at 7% annually, thanks to reinvesting dividends. After a decade, I would already have a portfolio throwing off £3,600 each year in dividends.
I could keep compounding like Buffett does, or start drawing it as passive income.
One income share to consider
As an example, one share I think dividend-focused investors should consider is insurer Aviva (LSE: AV). The FTSE 100 firm cut its dividend in 2020 but has since been steadily raising it again. Currently, the yield stands very close to my example above, at 7.1%.
In practice, like Buffett, I always keep my portfolio diversified across different shares. That means I may still hit an average target yield even though some shares I own offer more and others less.
The insurance market is huge and I see no reason for that to change. Some insurance is mandatory, while a lot of it is voluntary but customers buy it year after year. That attractive level of demand makes for a highly competitive industry. One risk I see for Aviva is smaller rivals trying to chip into its strong market position by offering more competitive prices, meaning it could lose customers.
Its large customer base is in fact one of the things I like about Aviva. I also think its strong brand and deep experience in what is a complex industry can help it perform competitively.
4 Wild Monthly Dividends (Up to 20%) From the Market’s Most Hidden Corners
Brett Owens, Chief Investment Strategist Updated: October 17, 2025
Generally speaking, we like monthly dividends better than quarterly payouts. I mean, why wait 90 days to get paid when “every 30” is possible?
Here’s another great thing about monthly divvies—they often have big fat annual yields attached to them.
For example, today we are going to discuss a batch yielding between 8% and 19.8%. On a modest $500,000 in savings, these monthly machines will dish between $40,000 and $99,000 per year!
If we randomly select a few monthly dividend payers, chances are we’ll earn (way!) more. Here’s the difference between the stock market’s monthly dividend stocks and the major indices:
Dividend heroes or yield traps? Let’s look at this four pack in more detail.
Sabine Royalty Trust (SBR) Distribution Yield: 8.0%
We’ll begin with a rarity among rarities—Sabine Royalty Trust (SBR).
Royalty Trusts are among the most passive income vehicles on the market. They exist to own shares in income generated from natural resources (crude oil, natural gas, minerals, etc.), which they turn around and pay back to unitholders, less costs, in the form of distributions. Sabine Royalty Trust, for instance, receives Sabine Corporation’s landowner royalties, overriding royalty interests, minerals, production payments, and more from proved but undeveloped oil-and-gas properties in six states, predominantly in the Permian Basin.
How central are distributions to royalty trusts’ existence? Here’s the first paragraph from the first page of SBR’s most recent earnings report:
Who can argue with a business that has no debt, pays a generous monthly distribution that by nature has to be covered, and has run laps around the broader energy sector?
Why Drill for Oil When Collecting Royalties Is So Much More Lucrative?
Well, there are a few oddities we must address.
Sabine Royalty Trust won’t be with us forever, for one. While it technically has no termination date, the company was established to fizzle away one day. Its asset base was established in 1983, and those assets are fixed—SBR can’t acquire new ones, so when their current assets are depleted, they’re gone. The trust itself would likely terminate shortly before that. SBR will terminate if there are two successive fiscal years in which Sabine’s gross revenues from royalty properties are less than $2 million per year, or if unitholders vote for a closure.
Because SBR only collects royalties, it’s extremely sensitive to commodity prices, so it can be far more volatile than the energy sector. The distribution isn’t predictable, either—over the past five years, distributions have ranged between 2.7 cents per share and $1.14 per share. Those distributions aren’t tax-efficient, either; they’re considered ordinary income, so we’re taxed at our marginal rates.
Capital Southwest Corp. (CSWC) Dividend Yield: 12.7%
Capital Southwest Corp. (CSWC) is a business development company that provides capital to lower middle market firms with EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) of between $3 million and $25 million. Its current portfolio stands at 122 firms—roughly 90% of its deals are first-lien loans, 9% are equity, and the rest are a sprinkling of second-lien and subordinated debt.
The blessing and (more so at the moment) curse of many BDCs is that they deal in a high percentage of floating-rate debt, which is outstanding when rates are rising, less so when they’re declining. And the stock market being what it is, sometimes the connection isn’t perfect—BDCs can just as easily trade on expectations for policy as it can the policy itself:
Still, It’s Clear the Fed Has a Lot of Say in BDC Performance
However, in CSWC’s case, some Fed pain now might be a blessing in disguise.
The BDC industry is a difficult one that, as a whole, tends to lag the market. But a few individuals stand out, and CSWC is one of them, clobbering its peers and outperforming the S&P 500 over the long term. It’s internally managed (so external managers aren’t bleeding fees from it), it has moderate leverage, the dividend is well-covered and, as of summer 2025, those dividends are paid on a monthly basis. Most of its high dividend is attributable to its regular dividend, but CSWC kicks in supplementals that account for another percentage point or so of yield.
So why would lower rates be a blessing for a company that wants higher rates? They won’t be—at least not for Capital Southwest. But they could provide a little relief for prospective buyers who don’t want to pay the current 21% premium to net asset value (NAV) for shares.
PennantPark Floating Rate Capital (PFLT) Dividend Yield: 14.0%
Another BDC, PennantPark Floating Rate Capital (PFLT), which targets midsized companies that generate $10 million to $50 million in annual EBITDA.
PFLT effectively invests us in more than 190 portfolio companies spread across over 110 PE sponsors. It’s also a “value-added” BDC that lends its expertise in specific industries, hence its portfolio focus on five categories: health care, software and technology, consumer, business services and government services.
And the name pretty much says it all. PennantPark Floating Rate does about 90% of its funding through first-lien debt, almost all of which is floating-rate in nature. (The remaining 10% is made up of equity co-investments and joint venture equity.)
Like with CSWC, it’s clear that rates are the straw that stirs PFLT’s performance.
Though PFLT Hasn’t Been Nearly as Strong a Performer as CSWC
I’ve previously looked at PFLT and noted that its dividend coverage was getting tight. It’s getting tighter, too, with the dividend outstripping NII across a few quarters over the past year-plus. A dividend reduction is at least in the realm of possibility, though management believes that joint venture growth (including a new JV, PennantPark Senior Secured Loan Fund II) and additional leverage can help it meet its NII needs. Wall Street may be a little skeptical; PFLT trades at a 20% discount to NAV.
Orchid Island Capital (ORC) Dividend Yield: 19.8%
REITs are well-known for their above-average dividends, but if we want to test the upper limits, we want to look at mortgage REITs.
Most REITs are equity REITs, which own (and sometimes operate) physical real estate. But mortgage REITs purchase stacks of paper with a business model that goes something like this:
Borrow money at short-term rates.
Buy bundles of mortgages (securitized mortgages)
Collect the income these mortgages produce at (hopefully higher) long-term interest rates.
And whereas you can commonly find nice yields in the mid-single-digits among equity REITs, it’s extremely common to find double-digit yields in the mREIT space.
Orchid Island Capital (ORC) is one such mREIT dealing in agency residential mortgage-backed securities (read: Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, etc.), including fixed-rate pass-through securities, interest-only securities and inverse interest-only securities. It’s externally managed and advised by Bimini Advisors. And its yield is in the stratosphere, currently just shy of 20%.
We discussed another mREIT with a rising dividend a couple weeks ago, and I mentioned that “Generally speaking, the Federal Reserve’s easing should be a boon for mREITs, including the potential for improving originations in the residential space.”
In fact, you can see ORC’s improving health over the past two years or so as the rate environment has improved.
Unfortunately, You Can See Something Else, Too
Orchid Island’s long-term total return since its 2013 initial public offering is bad enough. But the massive dividend papers over a trainwreck of a price performance, with shares off 90% since that IPO. The declines have been so precipitous that just a few years ago, ORC had to initiate a 1-for-5 reverse stock split; without it, shares today would trade for less than $2.
And as the chart above shows, ORC has no compunction about reducing its dividend at the drop of a hat.
When investing, your capital is at risk. The value of your investments can go down as well as up and you may get back less than you put in.
The content of this article is provided for information purposes only and is not intended to be, nor does it constitute, any form of personal advice. Investments in a currency other than sterling are exposed to currency exchange risk. Currency exchange rates are constantly changing, which may affect the value of the investment in sterling terms. You could lose money in sterling even if the stock price rises in the currency of origin. Stocks listed on overseas exchanges may be subject to additional dealing and exchange rate charges, and may have other tax implications, and may not provide the same, or any, regulatory protection as in the UK.
Warren Buffett famously said that the stock market is “a device for transferring money from the impatient to the patient“. What the celebrated billionaire investor means is that it rewards those who hold quality stocks through the inevitable ups and downs.
And it really rewards those who buy from others selling out of fear. For instance, consider perhaps Buffett’s most famous investment — Coca-Cola. Back in the 1980s, he was greedily buying shares of Coke from impatient investors. In fact, he ended up with roughly 6.2% of the firm’s outstanding shares.
Fast forward to today, Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway owns more than 9% of the beverage giant, without buying another share. How so? Due to Coca-Cola’s regular share buybacks, which have reduced the total share count and indirectly boosted Berkshire’s stake.
What’s more, Buffett’s holding company has received rising dividends, lots of them. Indeed, it’s on track over the next few years to receive annual dividends of $1bn, which would be incredible considering he bought the entire stake for about $1.3bn.
Building wealth patiently
Naturally, not all of us have the wherewithal to take chunky 6% stakes in global corporations. But the same patient Buffett-esque mindset applies to building wealth, even when starting with modest sums of money.
To give an example, let’s assume someone who gets paid weekly can afford to invest £99 into the stock market. That might not sound like it would do much, but it’s actually £5,150 every year.
If this investor were to generate half the returns that Warren Buffett has throughout his illustrious career, that would be around 10%. This is the ballpark figure for global stocks over the long run, with dividends reinvested.
Generating this average rate of return on £5,150 each year would end in a portfolio worth £885,627 after 30 years!
Dividend machine
At this point, things would become interesting because an investor would have two choices. They could plough on investing their £99 every week, turning the £885k portfolio into almost £1.5m after another five years.
Or, alternatively, they could choose to stop investing and enjoy spending the dividends being generated. If the portfolio yielded 6% at this point, that would be just over £53,000 every year in passive income.
By this point, the portfolio should be sufficiently diversified to offset the risk of individual dividends cuts. And also big enough to absorb those stocks that don’t generate positive returns (not all shares do, sadly).
Emerging FTSE 100 bottling giant
Returning to Coca-Cola, I think its namesake from the FTSE 100 is worth considering for a portfolio. That’s Coca-Cola HBC (LSE:CCH), the bottling firm that makes, distributes, and sells brands like Coke, Fanta, and Monster in certain markets across Europe and Africa.
In Q3, the firm reported organic sales growth of 5%. That was below market expectations for 6.3%, which highlights that the company might be experiencing slowing growth due to weak consumer spending (this is a risk).
However, zooming further out, year-to-date organic revenue growth was still strong at 8.1%. Most firms would give their right arm for this level of growth in today’s challenging market.
Also, the company is buying a 75% controlling interest in Coca-Cola Beverages Africa for $2.6bn. This will create an emerging Coca-Cola bottling giant, with leading market positions across Africa and Europe.
Further to the announcement by the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority (“CMA”) earlier today in relation to its Phase 1 review of the Company’s combination with Assura plc (“Assura”), PHP is pleased to note that the CMA has concluded that the transaction gives rise to no competition concerns.
As a result of this decision, the CMA’s requirement for the businesses to be held financially and operationally separate, subject to certain derogations, is expected to conclude shortly. PHP will now turn its full attention to the integration of the two businesses and realising the full benefits of the combination, including delivery of the expected run-rate cost synergies of at least £9 million.
Mark Davies, CEO of PHP, commented:
“We are pleased with the decision announced by the CMA today that there are no competition concerns with this strategically important transaction and we appreciate the work done by the CMA team during their review.
The management team can now focus on the integration of the two companies and is excited about the prospect and opportunity it will bring by creating a £6bn healthcare REIT owning, managing and investing in critical social infrastructure assets in a sector well placed to deliver growth.
This earnings-accretive transaction, which has compelling strategic and financial benefits, will give PHP a lower cost of capital and a strong platform to accelerate our future expansion.
I’m looking forward to working with our new colleagues from Assura and working together to help the NHS deliver its 10-year plan by shifting more patients into primary care which will help the NHS save money. We have the knowledge, expertise and relationships and with a lower cost of capital are well-placed to help deliver modern, flexible healthcare buildings in communities around the UK and Ireland.”
The person responsible for arranging the release of this announcement on behalf of PHP is Toby Newman, Company Secretary.
When investing, your capital is at risk. The value of your investments can go down as well as up and you may get back less than you put in.
The content of this article is provided for information purposes only and is not intended to be, nor does it constitute, any form of personal advice. Investments in a currency other than sterling are exposed to currency exchange risk. Currency exchange rates are constantly changing, which may affect the value of the investment in sterling terms. You could lose money in sterling even if the stock price rises in the currency of origin. Stocks listed on overseas exchanges may be subject to additional dealing and exchange rate charges, and may have other tax implications, and may not provide the same, or any, regulatory protection as in the UK.
There are lots of different ways to put money into the stock market. One is to buy shares (or even a single share) in an investment trust.
Investment trusts come in all shapes and sizes but basically they are pooled investment vehicles. Think of an investment trust as a company listed on the stock market that has investing as its own business.
Each trust needs to be considered on its own merits. But at a high level, there are some potential pros and cons of buying into an investment trust, as I see it. Here are a couple of each.
That can be hard to do on a very limited budget – but an investment trust can offer a potential solution.
Take Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust (LSE: SMT) as an example. Its share price is currently below £12.
But its portfolio spans dozens of companies. They include listed tech giants like Meta Platforms and Nvidia. They also include unlisted companies a small private investor may otherwise struggle to invest in, such as SpaceX (Scottish Mortgage’s biggest holding right now).
By buying just one share in Scottish Mortgage, an investor would get access to a diversified portfolio.
Professional management
Over the long run, Scottish Mortgage has been a runaway success story. It has not cut its dividend per share for almost a century.
The investment trust’s share price has moved up 16% over five years, but that has included periods of significant volatility. It is up 80% since October 2020, for example – but still 24% beneath its price back in November
Why has Scottish Mortgage been so volatile? Its focus is on growth companies. As their prices have moved around a lot, so has Scottish Mortgage’s.
The investment trust has professional fund managers who help decide what shares to buy and sell. Expert managers can offer skills and experience a private investor lacks. But not all managers are equally good.
Still, in many cases I think an investment trust having a team of professional stock pickers can help make it more attractive.
Regular fees
Who pays for that? After all, fund managers do not usually come cheaply no matter how good or bad they turn out to be!
Above I said an investment trust is a listed business (that just happens to be a pooled investment). So it needs to pay costs like staff wages.
To do that an investment trust typically levies an annual management fee. That can be modest, but over the long term can add up.
Imperfect pricing
Being listed in its own right also brings another possible disadvantage (though it can actually work to investors’ advantage too).
The stock market price for an investment trust reflects what investors are willing to pay for it. That can differ from a ‘sum of the parts’ valuation (or what is known as the net asset value).
For example, Scottish Mortgage currently trades at a 12% discount to its net asset value.
That may frustrate shareholders, who think the market undervalues their holding. Seen as a cup half-full, though, such discounts may offer investors a chance to buy something for less than its value.
abrdn UK Smaller Cos Growth Trust PLC ex-dividend date Bluefield Solar Income Fund Ltd ex-dividend date Brunner Investment Trust PLC ex-dividend date CQS Natural Resources Growth & Income PLC ex-dividend date Edinburgh Investment Trust PLC ex-dividend date Foresight Solar Fund LTD ex-dividend date Henderson Far East Income Ltd ex-dividend date Invesco Global Equity Income Trust PLC ex-dividend date JPMorgan Claverhouse Investment Trust PLC ex-dividend date M&G Credit Income Investment Trust PLC ex-dividend date
How much do you need in an ISA to target a £20,000 passive income at 60?
The power of compound returns means the prospect of retiring with a good passive income from stocks and shares can be within reach.
Posted by Alan Oscroft
Published 27 October
Image source: Getty Images
When investing, your capital is at risk. The value of your investments can go down as well as up and you may get back less than you put in.
The content of this article is provided for information purposes only and is not intended to be, nor does it constitute, any form of personal advice. Investments in a currency other than sterling are exposed to currency exchange risk. Currency exchange rates are constantly changing, which may affect the value of the investment in sterling terms. You could lose money in sterling even if the stock price rises in the currency of origin. Stocks listed on overseas exchanges may be subject to additional dealing and exchange rate charges, and may have other tax implications, and may not provide the same, or any, regulatory protection as in the UK.
You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services.
It might be obvious that the sooner we start saving and investing, the better our chances of reaching 60 with some decent passive income in the bag.
How much we need depends on how much we hope to withdraw. There’s a rough rule that suggests taking 4% per year.
Should you buy Empire Metals Limited shares today?
The idea is that should still leave enough capital to grow with inflation for the future. Based it on that, the sums are easy. We need £500,000 by age 60 to take out £20,000 per year.
25 years? Nah!
That’s not a trivial task. But the miracle of compound returns makes it look more achievable.
What we need to do is reinvest any dividend cash we get into new shares. And then those new shares earn us extra dividends next year, which we then can use to buy even more shares… and so on.
Over the past 10 years, the average Stocks and Shares ISA has returned 9.6% annually. That’s ahead of the annual FTSE 100 average over the past 20 years, approximately 7%. Let’s take the more conservative of those two figures.
How soon?
Invest the full ISA limit every year in shares, and buy new shares with all dividend cash. With an annual 7% return, we could reach the half million in a bit less than 15 years.
Someone age 45 today could reach £500,000 by 60. But… a 40-year-old who starts today could have £850,000 by the same age. Starting just five years earlier could result in a 70% bigger passive income pot!
Now, we can’t all reach the ISA limit every year. But whatever we can afford to invest, the key thing is that starting sooner can make a huge difference.
Starting earlier could make another difference too.
Empire strikes back
We all dream of finding the elusive multi-bagger. And the more years we have at our disposal, the better our chances. Looking at what’s happened to Empire Metals (LSE: EEE) reminds me of that — it’s up 460% over the past 12 months, and more than 1,000% in five years
Even with such a rise, Empire has crashed more than 90% since 2010
It’s a mining explorer, going after precious and rare metals. Companies like that can be very risky. And once they get way down in penny-share territory, they often never make it back.
But then, the company made a titanium discovery in Australia in 2023, which gave it a boost. And now we have some clues of the size.
An update on 14 October described it as “One of the largest and highest-grade titanium resources reported globally.” Estimates suggest there’s more than 200m tonnes of titanium oxide down there.
Balance is best
I’m not saying we should pin our passive income hopes on finding big winners. In fact, it’s easy to lose 100% on a speculative investment like this. As it happens, Empire shares have already fallen back from September’s peak.
But the more years of investing ahead of us, the more we can consider risking a small amount on a stock like this. I’m thinking about it for my ISA.
Here are five non-UK (or globally oriented) income-focused investment trusts / funds which may be accessible to a UK investor and potentially suitable for a retirement portfolio (with appropriate due diligence). These differ from the purely UK-listed trusts I listed earlier; they bring exposure to other markets, sectors or closed-end structures. This is not personal financial advice. You must check availability, tax/treaty issues, domicile, yield sustainability, currency risk, and suitability for your circumstances.
1. HYT (BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund – US closed-end fund)
This is a US-listed closed-end fund (CEF) whose recent data shows a distribution yield of ~9.8%. cefconnect.com
It invests in high-yield (below investment-grade) corporate bonds, giving higher yield but with credit risk, interest-rate risk and leverage risk (the CEF uses debt).
Why it could fit a retirement income portfolio: High yield means it can generate meaningful cash flow; adding fixed income / credit exposure is a useful diversification away from pure equity dividends.
Important caveats: Being US-domiciled means tax considerations for UK investor (withholding, US estate tax if you hold US equities, though in bonds less so) — check domicile & holding vehicle. Also, credit risk means higher chance of distribution cuts in stress.
If you pick it, it could serve as a “higher-income” component, but you’d likely balance it with more stable income sources.
2. ASGI (Abrdn Global Infrastructure Income Fund – US listed closed-end fund)
Listed in the “top-5 high-yield closed-funds” list: ASGI offers a yield of ~13.47% (per one 2025 commentary) and invests in infrastructure, public & private/direct, globally. AInvest
Why it might be appealing: Infrastructure tends to have relatively stable, long-term cash flows (toll roads, utilities, etc.), which fit an income mindset. The high yield is attractive for retirement income.
Key risks: High yield often reflects higher risk. The fund may borrow, invest in higher risk infrastructure assets, have private asset exposure (less liquid), and global infrastructure brings currency/regulation risk. Also tax/treaty implications for a UK investor need to be checked.
Use case: A portion of your income-portfolio could hold a global infrastructure income trust like this — but manage the size/weight given higher risk.
3. HTD (John Hancock Tax-Advantaged Dividend Income Fund – US CEF)
An example closed-end fund cited for “high yield from dividend equities” (yield ~6.7% in the example article) for US common & preferred stocks. InvestorPlace
Why consider: Diversifies into US equities with an income tilt (and some preferred securities) — for a UK investor this adds geographic and asset-type diversification compared to UK equity income trusts.
Risks: US equity risk, dividend sustainability risk, currency risk (USD/GBP), and UK investors must consider foreign tax credit / withholding. Also, some CEFs pay part of their distributions out of NAV (return of capital) which can degrade principal over time — you must check the fund’s distribution policy.
4. SYI (SPDR MSCI Australia Select High Dividend Yield ETF)
An Australian listed fund (ASX ticker “SYI”) focusing on high dividend-yielding Australian companies. For instance, its factsheet shows a dividend yield ~4.3% for the index underlying the fund. SSGA+1
Why include: Provides Australian dividend exposure (which can bring franking credits for Australian tax residents; for UK investors the franking credits may not apply, but still geographic diversification is useful).
Use in retirement income portfolio: Consider as a “non-UK / Australia dividend exposure” piece.
Risks: Yield is moderate, not exceptional; Australian equities will bring local economic and currency risk; you must check accessibility (UK investor can buy via UK-broker that offers ASX or via ADR/equivalent) and tax issues (dividends, franking credits, exchange rate).
Note: The yield is lower than some high-yield US CEFs, but provides diversification.
5. HVST (BetaShares Australian Dividend Harvester ETF)
Another Australian vehicle: it targets high-dividend paying Australian shares and shows a 12-month gross distribution yield ~7.2% including franking credits in its factsheet. Betashares
Why it may appeal: Higher yield than the more “moderate” yield Australian fund above; again provides geographical diversification and income.
Risk factors: The strategy might have additional complexity (e.g., harvesting, high dividend payers which might have higher business risk or lower growth, currency risk for UK investor). Also franking credits may not benefit UK investor.
How to use: As a “higher yield / alternative market” piece in retirement income portfolio, but you’d balance with more stable yield trusts.
🧭 How to integrate these into a retirement income portfolio
Given you already have UK-based equity income trusts (from earlier list), these additional vehicles can help broaden exposure. Here’s how you might structure a model approach:
Tier
Role
Example vehicle(s)
Core Income (Stable, moderate yield, strong track record)
Larger weight, foundation of income
UK equity income trusts from earlier list (e.g., UK high-quality dividend trusts)
Diversified Global Income
Moderate weight, helps broaden geography
SYI (Australia), global equity income trusts (from earlier list)
Higher Yield/Alternative Income
Smaller weight, for extra yield but higher risk
HYT, ASGI, HVST — non-UK, higher yield but higher risk
20% Alternate income (higher yield trusts like HYT / ASGI)
15% Geographic/sector diversification (Australia via SYI/HVST)
By doing this you get:
Diversification across geographies & asset-types
A tiered risk/yield approach (not putting your entire income on high-risk high-yield)
Exposure to higher yield but controlled via smaller allocation
The ability to rebalance over time (if yields change, discounts/premiums change, etc)
⚠️ Key considerations and risks (especially for UK investor)
Domicile / tax: Many of the non-UK vehicles may be US- or Australia-domiciled. UK investor issues: withholding tax on dividends, inability to reclaim certain foreign taxes, potential extra tax filing, currency risk.
Currency risk: Income and capital movement for US/Australia denominated funds will be affected by USD/GBP or AUD/GBP exchange-rates.
Dividend sustainability: High yields are tempting but need underlying business or asset-base to support them long-term. Especially for closed-end funds carrying debt or with high payout ratios.
Discount/premium to NAV (for CEFs): Closed-end funds often trade at a discount or premium to net asset value. That influences risk/return.
Liquidity and accessibility: Some Australian trusts/ETFs may be harder to access via UK broker, or cost more (FX, brokerage).
Tax treatment of franking credits (Australia): As a UK investor you likely won’t benefit fully from Australian franking credits; thus the “gross yield” including franking credits may over-state your net yield.
Higher risk = smaller slice: When adding higher-yield/trusts with more risk, keep those as smaller allocations so your retirement income base remains robust.
Rebalancing & capital drawdown: In retirement you may need to draw capital (not just reinvest). High‐yield trusts may see capital volatility—so plan for drawdown strategy, preserve some capital vs. pure income chasing.
Here are five additional investment trusts (largely UK-listed but with global exposure) that may suit a retirement income portfolio. As always, this is for educational purposes only, not individual financial advice — you should check suitability, charges, dividend sustainability, tax implications and diversification for your own circumstances.
1. JPMorgan Global Growth & Income Trust (ticker JGGI)
A global equity income trust with worldwide exposure. According to one source, it declared a dividend target to deliver “an attractive level of predictable income and capital appreciation”. Fidelity+2Invesco+2
Suitable for a retirement portfolio because: offers global diversification (not UK-only), decent income and growth potential.
Key risks: yield is modest compared to high-yield trusts, global equities mean currency/market risk, and you’ll need to ensure the dividend is sustainable.
2. Murray International Trust (ticker MYI)
A trust in the “Global Equity Income” sector. In a listing of “most viewed trusts” it had a yield of ~4.4%. The AIC+1
Why consider it: again global exposure, which can provide diversification from UK-only trusts; moderate yield with potential for inflation-hedge via global holdings.
Things to check: the yield is lower than some high-yield UK trusts, so if immediate income is the priority you might need to supplement; global exposure adds more variability.
3. Aberdeen Asian Income Fund (ticker AAIF)
Focused on Asia Pacific equity income. In one list it had a yield of ~7.45% and 5-year dividend growth ~9.3%. Interactive Investor+1
Why consider it: higher yield, plus geographic diversification into Asia Pacific which may offer growth and income potential that complements more traditional UK/US holdings.
Key risks: Asian markets tend to be more volatile; currency risk; emerging market risk; higher business risk compared to developed markets.
4. Henderson Far East Income Trust (ticker HFEL)
A specialist Asia Pacific (ex-Japan) equity income trust. It is listed among the highest-yielding equity investment trusts, with yields over ~10% in some reports. The AIC+1
Why include it: offers very high yield, which can be attractive for retirement income; adds a niche/region layer to your portfolio.
Caveats: High yield often implies higher risk (region risk, sector risk, currency risk, company risk). Dividend sustainability and underlying company health become more critical.
5. Invesco Global Equity Income Trust (ticker IGET)
A globally diversified income trust. Its objective states a focus on providing income and capital growth through a diversified global portfolio. Invesco
Why consider it: global diversification, income aim, useful alternative to UK-only equity trusts; good fit for a retirement portfolio seeking both income and some growth.
Key things to check: verify current yield, discount/premium to NAV, fees, underlying holdings and how well income has held up across market cycles.
✅ Summary & Portfolio Considerations
These five provide a good spread: some global equity income trusts, some regionally focussed (Asia Pacific) with higher yields, complementing UK-centric trusts you might already have.
For a retirement portfolio you may aim for a blend of:
Moderate yield + good dividend growth (to combat inflation)
Geographical diversification (UK, global developed, emerging/Asia)
Sector diversification (not all banking or consumer goods)
Balance between yield and capital preservation/growth.
⚠️ Key Risks & Things to Do
Verify dividend sustainability: a high yield is tempting, but check if the trust’s underlying companies can support the dividends during downturns.
Be aware of discount/premium to NAV: many investment trusts trade at a discount (or premium) to their net asset value; this affects value and risk.
Consider fees and structure: closed-ended trusts (investment trusts) have some advantages (e.g., ability to hold reserves) but also structural complexities.
Tax and currency: as a UK resident you need to consider withholding tax on overseas dividends, currency impact (when income/capital is in non-GBP), and tax‐treatment in your retirement account (ISA/SIPP).
Don’t rely on yield alone: growth of dividends, capital preservation, and diversification are also important, especially in retirement when you may need to draw down income rather than reinvest.
5 world-class investment trust dividend shares for a retirement portfolio.
ChatGPT said:
Here are five UK-listed investment trusts that are commonly considered by income-focused portfolios (such as for retirees). Note: This is not personal advice — you should evaluate suitability in the context of your own retirement portfolio, risk tolerance, tax situation, and diversification needs.
1. abrdn Equity Income Trust (ticker AEI)
A UK equity income trust managed by abrdn. In its half‐year report it expected to pay ~23.0 pence per share for the full year, which at the time implied a dividend yield of about 7.1%. Investegate+2AJ Bell+2
It is listed by the Association of Investment Companies (“AIC”) as a “high yield, consistent income” trust (UK Equity Income sector). The AIC+1
For a retirement portfolio: this offers a relatively high yield, but being UK equities means it carries equity market risk (and currency/domestic risk for a UK investor).
Key risk: For high yield, you must check that dividends are sustainably covered and the underlying companies can continue to generate profits and cash-flow.
2. City of London Investment Trust (ticker CTY)
One of the longest-running UK trusts: the trust has increased its dividend for 59 consecutive years. Fidelity+1
Yield currently about 4.2% (according to October 2025 data) on its dividend history. The Motley Fool+1
For a retirement portfolio: strong track record of dividend growth (important for inflation), relatively moderate yield suggests somewhat more modest income but maybe lower risk compared to high-yield trusts.
Key risk: Lower yield means less immediate income, and the underlying exposure is to UK equities, so you should ensure diversification.
3. International Public Partnerships (ticker INPP)
An infrastructure investment company/trust: as of its 2024 report it quoted a “current dividend yield of 7.2%” from the board. The AIC
Fidelity data shows its income only yield for recent years around 5.9% and trending up. Fidelity
For a retirement portfolio: infrastructure tends to be viewed as more defensive (long-term contracts, often inflation-linked cash flows) — good complement to pure equity income trusts.
Key risk: Infrastructure trusts can still have project risk, regulatory risk, inflation risk, and may carry gearing/discount to NAV risk (many trade at a discount).
4. Henderson Far East Income Trust (ticker HFEL)
A regional equity income trust (Asia Pacific / Far East equities). One of the highest-yielding trusts according to AIC: yield around ~10% reported in 2024. The AIC+1
For a retirement portfolio: this offers higher income potential and geographic diversification beyond UK/US — which is helpful.
Key risk: Higher yield often reflects higher risk — here exposure to emerging markets/Asia & currency risk & possibly higher volatility. Might be less “safe” than a UK equity income trust.
5. Chelverton UK Dividend Trust (ticker CDIT)
UK equity income trust focused on smaller companies. Yield reported at around 7.5% in data to August 2025. AJ Bell+1
For a retirement portfolio: This can boost yield and add small-cap exposure (which can drive growth).
Key risk: Small cap companies often have higher business risk, may cut dividends in downturns, and the ongoing charges tend to be higher (which reduces net income for investors) as noted by AJ Bell commentary. AJ Bell
✅ Why these are “world-class” (in a UK context) for dividend/retirement income
All have long histories of paying/increasing dividends (e.g., City of London with 59 years of increases).
They offer yields considerably above the typical market (FTSE All-Share might yield ~3.5-4%).
They provide diversification across geographies (UK, Asia, infrastructure) and asset types (equity income vs infrastructure).
The investment-trust structure has beneficial features for income-seeking (closed-ended, ability to retain reserves to smooth dividends, long-term horizon) — commentary from the AIC notes this is a key advantage.
⚠️ Some important caveats
Dividends are never guaranteed. Past increases don’t guarantee future increases.
Yield isn’t everything: A high yield might come with higher risk (business risk, valuation risk, discount to NAV risk, sector/regulatory risk).
Diversification risk: If you load up on UK equity income trusts you may miss out on growth or global diversification.
Inflation risk: Even a 4-7% yield may not keep up with inflation over long retirements unless there’s dividend growth.
Tax and currency: If you’re UK-resident, dividends are subject to UK dividend tax rules. For trusts with overseas exposure (Asia, infrastructure) currency and overseas tax/growth effects apply.
Discount to NAV risk: Many trusts trade at a discount to net asset value — that can offer opportunity, but also reflects investor concerns.
Gearing/leverage risk: Some trusts borrow (gear) which can amplify dividends but also amplify losses in downturns.
🔍 My selection criteria summary
Yield ≥ ~4-5% in the UK context.
Long record of consistent dividends or increasing dividends.
Diversified across sectors/geographies.
Sufficient size/liquidity (to ensure you can get in and out).
Reasonable cost/ongoing charges and understandable risk profile.