The strategic review and sale process initiated by Picton in January 2026, to explore options to maximise value for shareholders, is ongoing. In May, Picton received a non-binding indicative all-share offer from LondonMetric and Schroder Real Estate Investment Trust, acting as a consortium, the terms of which can be seen at the end of this report. The consortium is yet to make a firm offer for Picton, but on 16 June it announced that it had progressed confirmatory due diligence. Based on closing share prices as at 15 June, the terms of the proposed offer represented a value of £396m for Picton or 76.9p per share, a 9.0% premium to the closing share price of Picton at the same date.
Three possible outcomes.
One.
If the bid is finalised and subject to the share prices of SREI and LMP, a profit could be booked.
Two
A bid is made and the profit isn’t worth booking, the SNOWBALL would end up with shares in SREI 7.6% yielding and LMP yielding 6.5% which would be an acceptable outcome.
Three.
No bid is finalised and you end up with PCTN shares yielding 5.3%.
The shares would have to be sold, most probably at a loss.
This year’s income for the SNOWBALL is secured, so there could be time to buy and wait for the outcome. The jury is still out.
Virtus InfraCap U.S. Preferred Stock ETF targets income investors seeking high recurrent yield via active management and leverage.
PFFA has outperformed passive peer PFF in total returns due to higher distributions, but both funds exhibit negative price returns and capital erosion.
PFFA’s current distribution exceeds its 30-day SEC yield and recent net investment income, signaling unsustainable payout levels and elevated risk of future cuts.
Management’s incentives may not align with investors, as high yields attract assets and fees even when distributions outpace fund earnings.
Looking for a portfolio of ideas like this one? Members of The Dividend Kings get exclusive access to our subscriber-only portfolios.
Philippe TURPIN/Photononstop via Getty Images
When it comes to retirement, investors love to have a steady stream of expected income pouring into their bank accounts.
Seeking Alpha seems to be a home to the largest community of income investors anywhere on the Internet. Looking at other investing websites, if you research dividends, you find a significantly greater focus on total returns than you do here on Seeking Alpha. Reddit, for example, has countless conversations regarding dividend investing but still focuses on lower yield, lower risk, and higher total return potential that seems to be the most popular with readers and Investing Groups on Seeking Alpha.
That’s because Seeking Alpha has effectively catered to this niche section of investors for the last decade. It should come as no surprise that the largest investment groups on Seeking Alpha also focus on this niche sector. They’ve grown together by focusing on this underserved population.
One key staple for income investors is the demand for high recurrent income. Preferred securities are a hybrid class of security that mixes both aspects of common equity and debt together. A common dividend cannot be paid before the preferred security dividend is paid, but missing a preferred dividend does not cause the company to go into default like a true debt instrument would. This middle ground allows preferred securities to have a higher yield than other forms of traditional debt but a greater degree of safety than common equity. That greater degree of safety, though, means that you are trading potential capital upside for higher recurrent income in the present. Preferred securities, however, are still not readily understood by many investors, and they will choose to sidestep investing in individual preferred securities and use exchange-traded funds instead.
Today, I want to look at one of the most popular exchange-traded funds for preferred securities on Seeking Alpha and discuss what it’s doing well, but also the brewing risks under the surface. If you’re an income investor and you love recurrent regular income that is potentially growing and hopefully not getting cut, then this may be a solid read for you.
Let’s dive in!
Hello Old Friend
Virtus InfraCap U.S. Preferred Stock ETF (PFFA) is an actively managed leveraged preferred security ETF that aims to meet a niche investor population. From its inception, PFFA has readily outperformed the passive index tracking preferred security ETF, the iShares Preferred and Income Securities ETF (PFF).
PFFA has outperformed PFF by a margin of over 40% in total returns. However, when we look at the actual price change returns from PFFA’s initiation, both have similarly negative price returns. This means that while what you’re getting in your pocket is significantly more, your capital is eroding in value. PFFA does not provide more capital preservation than PFF.
The reason for this is that both of these ETFs simply buy and hold. PFF blindly follows the index as it changes and does so on a quarterly basis, selling and buying regardless of premium or discount to par.
PFFA Annual Letter 2025
PFFA relies on active management to try to outperform the index, leading to portfolio turnover rates of sometimes over 60% on an annual basis. It’s this increased portfolio turnover and their use of leverage that is designed to help fuel greater return potential. PFFA uses between 20-30% leverage in an attempt to boost returns. This adds greatly to the volatility the fund experiences over short periods, as leverage works like an amplifier of both positive and negative returns. It also boosts the expenses of the fund to 2.11%, with 0.8% being their management fee and the rest the cost of their leverage. PFFA pays out a much larger distribution but does so at the expense of any type of additional capital-preservation measures.
Clearly, PFFA is paying out more and providing a greater total return because all of the return that they have in excess of PFF comes strictly from the distributions that they make, and this is what predominantly attracts investors to PFFA.
PFFA Factsheet
Over its lifetime, PFFA has had to cut its distribution only once. It has been raised multiple times, but never to its prior level. This means that original investors in PFFA are still receiving less each month than they received when they first invested in PFFA.
The key to remember is the fact that PFFA is not a preferred security investment by itself. You are investing in a fund that is actively managed using leverage and investing in preferred securities, and as such, you’re not going to receive the same level of income stability and security that you would from investing in individual high-quality preferred securities. You’re also going to receive potentially a significantly higher yield than you would from investing in those types of securities. You can find preferred securities offering anywhere from a 6-8% yield that is significantly lower risk and less volatile than you would find with PFFA, but you’re not going to benefit from the active trading activities of PFFA’s management team or the use of their leverage. So long as their management team can find excellent opportunities to achieve great returns, then you can expect the dividend to be consistent.
The risk is when environments are not favorable to their trading activity. When I last covered PFFA, I highlighted that if interest rates continued to drop, their ability to generate the high yield they’re providing would become strained. Thankfully, it looks as if interest rates are not going to be cut any further anytime soon, and there is a potential for interest rate hikes on the horizon if the economy remains strong and inflation remains high. There is a lot of gray in the outlook, and we only provide long-term outlooks to Dividend Kings members.
PFFA is currently not sustaining its present yield.
PFFA Website
According to the fund’s own website, its present distribution rate exceeds that of its 30-day SEC yield. The 30-day SEC yield is a measurement of the fund’s current earnings over the last 30 days, subtracting any of the expenses the fund has incurred, and then expressed as a yield. This allows us to know if, in the last 30 days, the fund has readily achieved or covered its yield from the income, distributions, and capital gains that it has achieved over that timeframe. PFFA has not.
Furthermore, when we look into the fund’s history, we can see that they did not cover their yield for the annual period going from October 2024 to October 2025 either. The fund generated a net investment income of $98 million and realized trading gains of $32 million but paid out $148 million in distributions, overpaying by $18 million. These figures include any gains from their active trading and options trading.
This means that management was well aware they were overpaying when they hiked the distribution in 2026. The question remains how much they are willing to fall behind in their distribution coverage before they are either forced to do another cut or stop growing their distribution.
This is one major risk area when it comes to investing in funds versus buying the individual securities yourself. Fund managers are not necessarily aligned with you personally because they receive revenue tied to the size of the fund, and a high yield above what you can readily find in the preferred security space will attract more investors to invest in PFFA, thus growing their management fees. The management team is incentivized to overpay to maintain that higher yield. The fund itself attracted over $550 million worth of new investment in 2025, meaning that while assets under management are growing and the management fee is growing, even if the fund itself can’t afford the distributions it’s paying.
One does not have to look beyond Oxford Lane Capital Corporation (OXLC) or Eagle Point Credit Company Inc. (ECC) to understand the dangers of overpaying a distribution to attract investors to a high yield. Once the music stops, the damage falls out. Thankfully, PFFA is an ETF and cannot trade at the same extreme discounts or premiums that closed-end funds like Oxford Lane and Eagle Point Credit can. Over-distributing your earnings still leads to NAV erosion regardless.
Who Is PFFA For?
PFFA is designed to provide a high level of recurrent income today, even if that income isn’t covered by the net investment income and the capital gains of the fund itself.
This makes the fund extremely attractive to income investors who are not particularly concerned about overall total return or capital preservation. This goes against the very fundamental process that we follow in Dividend Kings.
We are focused not just on capital preservation but also on capital gains on top of the dividends we receive. PFFA works as a diversification tool to gain exposure to a wider array of preferred securities, but not as a replacement for individual preferred security holdings we have within our Model Portfolio. We can get a slightly lesser yield but significantly greater levels of capital preservation and capital gains from our own investing activity, just like you can by investing in high-quality individual preferred securities.
One should not accept a fund manager overpaying the distribution to attract new investors to enrich themselves at the expense of their own capital eroding over time.
This is the dichotomy that exists within PFFA. It vastly outperforms the standard index while duplicating its fundamental flaw. On one hand, investors receive wonderful and strong income in the present from it. But on the other hand, you’re accepting that the capital you’re putting in there is going to be eroded because of the misalignment that management has with shareholders.
I can already hear some of you jumping to the comment section to disagree with me and say that Jay Hatfield, the portfolio manager, has readily said that he has a vast majority of his personal net worth invested in PFFA. That’s a great marketing tool for him, but you have to remember he doesn’t just receive the distributions that you do. He also receives the management fees from you. So he is willing to accept a 15% loss in capital value because he’s collecting significant sums of management fees on top of that as well.
PFFA also works well for investors who want exposure to preferred securities but still lack the basic understanding of how the sector works. It outperforms the passive index tracking PFF and provides a similar level of capital preservation. It does. This means that if you are looking to just use an ETF to meet your needs in this sector, PFFA is a no-brainer choice compared to PFF. I would encourage you, though, not just to stop there, but to gain a personal knowledge base and exposure to how preferred securities work and your own personal risk tolerance so that you can use PFFA as a temporary base to springboard into the deeper pool of understanding.
Conclusion
PFFA is designed to meet a particular niche desire that is extremely popular on Seeking Alpha, if not elsewhere on the Internet. Investors who are looking for strong income opportunities can use PFFA to meet that income desire while accepting that it is not going to provide any greater degree of capital preservation than PFF.
Individual investors would tremendously benefit from learning how to invest in individual preferred securities on their own, whether they seek out that knowledge through articles on Seeking Alpha, other places on the Internet, or the Preferred Security Primer within Dividend Kings.
You can generate a similar yield with a higher degree of capital preservation as a manager of your own portfolio, completely aligned to your own goals. The biggest issue when investing in a fund is recognizing that management is not strictly aligned with your benefit but benefits from growing the fund, even if it is at your expense.
Over the long term, PFFA has outperformed PFF and provides an easy exposure to preferred securities for novice investors, retirees, and those seeking a higher degree of recurrent income and potentially less capital risk than investing in common equity or debt. However, investing in preferred securities is a tradeoff. You receive higher yields now and less potential capital gains in the future.
The current environment gives some positive room for PFFA. If management effectively benefits from the unchanged interest rates we’re seeing right now by trading into those holdings that will benefit from the potential hikes in the future, then the distribution may be covered in 2026 when it wasn’t in 2025. The risk is that management gets caught flat-footed and they’re not able to adjust, or they make the wrong call. If they move into more floating-rate securities and interest rates decline, their holdings and their revenue will fall. If they move into fixed-rate holdings and interest rates are hiked. They may again see the same issue.
With a high turnover ratio, management does not regularly hold positions for long periods, unlike most preferred security investors. I don’t expect management to cut the distribution in the near term. They may be forced to in the long term because of overpayment. In the short term, it is too effective as a beacon to draw in new capital. I would not hold my breath for any sort of large distribution hike from them, given the fact that they are knowingly overpaying already. As long as the yield is attractive to investors and capital keeps pouring in, then the distribution will stay put.
Roasting someone or something means delivering a sharp, humorous insult—a joke that lightly (or sometimes brutally) mocks a person, idea, or object in a way meant to entertain others. The key is that the “burn” is intentional, witty, and usually exaggerated.
🔥 Core Definition
Roasting is playful or harsh teasing, often done publicly, where the goal is to embarrass the target a little for comedic effect. It’s not meant to be taken as literal hostility—though tone and context matter.
(See previous post)
The three options for your retirement fund.
Buy an annuity, not a option for this blog as you have to surrender your capital.
Grow your Snowball and live off the dividends, with the intention of never selling any shares to raise cash.
Use the 4% Rule.
The SNOWBALL will have at least 11k to re-invest back into the SNOWBALL
The SNOWBALL has a comparison share VWRP, the comparison being that you use the ETF for withdrawing 4% (inflation linked).
The current value of VWRP is £169,226, not too shabby.
The SNOWBALL current income 11k.
VWRP income using the 4% rule £6,769
If we now compound for ten years, the SNOWBALL should have income of 22k, 22% pa.
To receive 22k of income from VWRP the total would need to be 550k.
GL with that luck.
Note anyone joining in a bull market nearer to the end than the beginning is likely to lose money.
THE SNOWBALL out here acting like it’s the financial equivalent of Excalibur, when really it’s just a slightly‑motivated ice cube hoping compound interest remembers to show up.
It’s the only “locomotive” in history that needs a warm day to derail it.
It keeps strutting around your gallery like, “Behold, I am inevitable,” while melting faster than your enthusiasm for any stock that drops 3% in a week.
This thing calls itself THE SNOWBALL but has the energy of a Tesco Value marshmallow — soft, confused, and one hot cup of tea away from total annihilation.
And let’s be honest: if your snowball is your business, then your business is one mild British summer away from liquidation.
THE DIVIDEND DEITY
Patron Saint of Overpromised Payouts
The Roast (Primary Inscription)
Blessed be the payout that never arrives, yet somehow still demands worship.
An idol carved from quarterly reports, praying you won’t notice the footnotes.
Claims divine compounding powers, but can’t survive a rate hike without losing half its congregation.
A deity whose miracles are mostly accounting choices, sanctified by investors who didn’t read page 47.
Ah… page 47 — the sacred burial ground of every financial document’s sins.
In the Dividend Deity piece, invoking page 47 is the perfect museum‑grade wink because page 47 is always where the truth goes to die. It’s the universal hiding place for:
the “temporary adjustment to payout policy”
the “non‑cash impairment charge”
the “revised forward guidance”
the “unexpected headwinds”
the “seasonal volatility”
the “one‑off restructuring cost that happens every quarter”
Page 47 is the confessional booth of corporate finance — where the deity quietly admits it’s not divine, just leveraged.
Roast: The 4% Rule
The 4% rule struts around personal‑finance land like it’s Moses descending from the mountain, clutching stone tablets that read: “Thou shalt withdraw exactly four percent, forever.”
Meanwhile, markets are out here behaving like caffeinated toddlers with power tools.
This rule was born in the 1990s, when dial‑up internet was cutting‑edge and nobody had invented ETFs with names like “Ultra‑Mega‑Leveraged AI Quantum Growth.” Yet it still insists it’s relevant, like a retired accountant lecturing you about “the proper way to fold a £20 note.”
It assumes:
You’ll live exactly 30 years
Markets will behave politely
Inflation will sit quietly in the corner
Bonds will yield something other than disappointment
And you’ll never have a year where your portfolio decides to cosplay as a falling piano
The 4% rule is basically the financial equivalent of using a Nokia 3310 as your satnav. Sure, it technically works, but you’re going to end up in a field.
It’s the rule that says: “Withdraw 4% and you’ll be fine.” Translation: “Withdraw 4% and pray the universe doesn’t roll a natural 1.”
In 2026, with volatile markets, weird inflation, and interest rates doing interpretive dance, the 4% rule is less a retirement strategy and more a superstition. It’s the financial version of knocking on wood.
As the price rises the yield falls and now only yields 7%.
If the SNOWBALL was close to drawdown, SUPR would remain a core holding as it’s one of the ‘safest’ dividends in the IT universe. No dividend is entirely safe unless you hold short term Government Gilts to maturity.
The buying yield for SUPR was 7.3%, you would receive this yield as long as you held the Trust, hopefully gently increasing over time.
Johnny-come-latelys have received the best yields.
I may book the profit next week, subject to jam down.
An extra1% compounded over twenty years makes a noticeable difference to your Snowball.
These Landlords Pay Up to 17.1%. Will Those Dividends Survive the Fed?
Brett Owens, Chief Investment Strategist Updated: June 26, 2026
We should avoid REITs right now because the Fed talks tough about raising rates.
Or we should buy REITs right now because the Fed’s worries are overblown.
Which is true? Well, it depends.
Let’s talk about our beloved real estate investment trusts, or REITs, which we favor as retirement-focused investors. REITs must dish most of their profits to us as dividends. A congressional act created them decades ago, and it requires them to send us at least 90% of their taxable income as payouts, in exchange for tax advantages.
Now the lazy Wall Street maxim holds that REITs trade opposite interest rates. As rates rise, REITs lose their shine because there’s more competition for income. As rates fall, money pours in.
REITs Are Swimming Upstream Against Rate-Hike Expectations Source: FedWatch
But here’s a catch for the Wall Street suits. Money pours into the REIT sector despite rising-rate fears. REITs have climbed 9% year-to-date even as the odds of a hike shot up to 86%. What’s this telling us? That new Fed Chair Warsh can set the overnight rate, but he doesn’t set the rent.
Today we see a split in the REIT sector. Some climb despite the threat of rate hikes, while others take a beating in the old sell-REITs-on-rate-worries trade. So which ones do we buy? Both. We don’t worry about what the vanilla investors do. We trust the rent checks, because these rent checks power our payouts.
CTO Realty Growth (CTO, 7.3% dividend yield) is a retail REIT focused on open-air shopping centers predominantly located in fast-growing metro areas across the Southeast and Southwest.
Roughly half of its annualized base rent comes from “power centers” (outdoor malls anchored by Best Buy (BBY), Dick’s Sporting Goods (DKS), and other large-format retailers); another quarter from “lifestyle” properties anchored by restaurants, banks, and traditional retailers; and another 20% from grocery-anchored retail. The rest is split among mixed-use, single-tenant and office properties. It also generates income from managing Alpine Income Property Trust (PINE).
If the Fed does cut rates, it’ll likely be in response to still-high inflation and, more importantly, a healthy economy—something that clearly benefits CTO’s tenants. So it shouldn’t be surprising that the CTO is outperforming REITs this year and has picked up more momentum of late.
Despite its 2026 gains, CTO trades at a decent 10 times estimates for this year’s funds from operations (FFO). The dividend accounts for just 73% of those FFO projections, so it’s well-covered.
If Only It Weren’t So Stagnant, Too
NexPoint Residential Trust (NXRT, 7.8% dividend yield) is another southern operator, this one specializing in residential real estate. It owns 36 properties with 13,305 units in 10 markets in the Sun Belt, with a focus on Class B multifamily properties leased out to “workforce” and middle-income residents.
One of its most notable qualities is focusing on “value adds,” upgrading properties to induce higher rents. The company says it has added smart-home tech to more than 11,000 of its units, completed interior rehabs on over 10,000 of its units, and upgraded appliances in around 5,000—improvements that generate real rent premiums over time.
Unlike CTO, NexPoint has been raising its dividend for the past few years. That’s not the issue.
The problem with NXRT is a history of underperformance in both rising- and declining-rate environments.
The Fed Just Can’t Please NXRT
NXRT’s issues in 2022-23 weren’t limited to higher interest rates—operating expenses grew, and the REIT slammed against a record national multifamily supply cycle. The same supply issues weighed on the REIT in 2025 and into this year, as did a weakening job market, countering any help lower rates might have offered.
But multifamily starts are slowing, and leasing activity is showing signs of progress. That has NexPoint optimistic about 2027. I’d like to see continued strength in the job market, and a lower price than its 11x P/FFO, before getting too excited.
Global Net Lease (GNL, 8.3% dividend yield) is on the high end of the yield range for traditional equity REITs. It’s a commercial net-lease operator, which means its leases are “net” of taxes, insurance and maintenance costs. GNL just collects rent checks.
Global Net Lease is somewhat insulated from the Fed because it’s a multinational operator. It owns 809 properties across the U.S. and Canada, which combine to make up roughly three-quarters of straight-line rent (SLR). The U.K., Finland and a handful of other European countries account for the rest. Its properties are diverse, too—industrial and distribution real estate makes up almost half of SLR, while retail and office split the remainder nearly evenly.
That balance likely will shift soon. GNL is trying to reduce that office exposure, and it will add to its industrial holdings with a $535 million, all-stock acquisition of Modiv Industrial announced in May.
GNL shares lost roughly half their value between 2021 and 2024. But the turnaround has been real: a $1.8 billion multitenant portfolio sale, $1.3 billion in debt shed, occupancy up from 95% to 97%, investment-grade tenants up from 60% to 64%, and G&A expenses down from $65 million to $49 million. Shares have bounced nearly 70% off the 2024 bottom.
We’re still staring down a pair of problems.
For one, GNL’s turnaround story isn’t a secret—shares now trade at a plump 15 times FFO estimates.
And Then There’s the Potential for Dividend History to Repeat
And even after all those cuts, GNL’s 19-cent quarterly dividend is currently pacing at 125% of 2026 FFO estimates and 119% of 2027’s. So it’s difficult to have much confidence that 8% yield will last at current levels.
We can find significantly higher levels of yield in the mortgage REIT (mREIT) space. But they’re not taking the Fed’s hawkish shift as well, listing lower at the same time their equity REIT cousins are on the rise.
Mortgage REITs borrow at short-term rates to buy mortgages paying long-term rates, pocketing the spread. Short-term rates are usually lower than long-term rates, and ideally, short-term rates are declining while long-term rates hold steady or also decline. In that scenario, mREITs’ existing mortgages, which were issued when rates were higher, will yield more than newly issued ones (and thus be worth more).
Rising rates, then, aren’t great for their mortgages, but certain classes of mREITs might still hold up.
Armour Residential REIT (ARR, 17.1% dividend yield), for instance, deals in fixed-rate agency residential mortgage-backed securities (MBSes) issued by government-sponsored enterprises such as Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae and Ginnie Mae.
Yes, rate hikes aren’t great for the worth of their mortgages either, but agency guarantees mean these MBSes have virtually no default risk. Plus, rising interest rates also lessen prepayment risks, primarily because mortgage holders are less likely to refinance.
But the lower risk profile also means lower rates, so agency mREITs use a ton of leverage to produce more income. ARR, for instance, has a debt-to-equity ratio of nearly 8. Back in April, the company delivered a slight earnings miss, and its book value declined thanks to tightening spreads. Still, Wall Street currently expects profits to cover the monthly dividend. And while shares have delivered a modest, positive total return YTD, they still trade at a small (4%) discount to Armour’s book value.
But we have to be cautious: mREITs often readjust their dividends during shifting rate environments. So if rate hikes flatten earnings, it’s an open question as to whether ARR’s dividend will remain unscathed.
And Given Armour’s Dividend History, That’s a Fair Question
Then there’s Redwood Trust (RWT, 14.9% dividend yield), a deeply discounted mREIT trading at less than five times earnings estimates and 68% of book value.
Redwood is an originator of jumbo residential mortgages and single-family rental loans. In recent years, it has leaned more heavily on its Sequoia correspondent jumbo loan platform; its Aspire home equity investment options (HEI) and expanded loans platform; its CoreVest residential investment property origination platform; and its Redwood Investments portfolio of residential housing investments, which are sourced from the aforementioned platforms.
RWT shareholders have hardly been immune from rate cuts—it has made a pair of deep hacks since COVID.
However, Redwood Is Quicker to Hit the Gas When It Can
For now, dividends are well covered at 72% of 2026 earnings estimates. But this isn’t an agency mREIT, so Redwood actually faces added default risk as rates rise—a main driver of its steady stock descent since mid-April.
Income for the first six months of the year will be £7,620.00.
The fcast for the full year is 12k plus.
With the loss of income from the highest yielding share in the SNOWBALL (SEIT) and NESF trimming their dividend the fcast for 2027 is £11,261.00. Which will still be ahead of the plan.
Once the SNOWBALL has income of 1k a month and that is re-invested, compound interest should start to make a noticeable difference to the income figure.
The same picture appeared appropriate. What Bomb? Just a little flag with the word BOOM. This is an interesting factoid from SEIT’s from the 2025 AR.
Back then, when SEIT’s share price was 50p-60p per share the investment hurdle was to achieve at least a 16.5% IRR, implying those investments were (at least) intended to delivered levels of return equivalent to 36% or more (at today’s 33.6p share price)
Meanwhile the FY26 results aren’t altogether pretty, where a 90.6p NAV in FY25 became 77.8p NAV in FY26. That was the headline, and detractors loudly chortled at news of a 12.8p per share reduction. That NAV movement is comparing 12 months. At the interim results the NAV was 87.6p a share to it’s actually a -10.2p result in the six months to March 2026, or a -8.6p result excluding the effect of dividends.
Co-incidentally, I actually forecast a -5.8p per share loss through Onyx plus -2.8p company expenses (-8.6p a share) in my last article on SEIT.
Although I believed Inflation would have a positive effect to offset that based on the FY25 sensitivity chart. That effect proved to be the case, but at +0.3p per share it was far less than I had expected. Far less than the sensitivity appeared to guide.
The actual EPS for FY26 was -8.1p per share made up of -6.1p of portfolio movements, +0.3p of macro changes, +1.1p of hedging gains and -0.8p of FX portfolio movements, -0.9p of expenses and -1.7p a share RCF interest.
Where the -6.1p of portfolio movements is actually a -12.8p share portfolio loss offset by 4.8p of dividend and interest income for the year.
Note 3 gives details of details of some of these 12.8p a share losses, but it covers £61m of losses with £22.8m left unaccounted for. Onyx accounts for -4.15p and is no surprise – given the slow down in its growth.
But Oliva’s subsidies being stiffed by the Spanish government in 2026 and losing -2.3p a share valuation as a result is a surprise, while other write downs of nearly -6p a share are events which haven’t happened but SEIT are assuming they shall. So arguably the real loss for FY26 is just minus -2p – net of income.
That’s Net Income of 4.8p a share offset by known FV losses of -6.8p a share. Where potential ones of 6p have been assumed shall happen in the future, so let’s kitchen sink them.
In other words if Glencore do deploy their Li-Cycle site in 2026 or 2027, if the delays at Red Rochester by 2028 do not transpire, and if the Ohio Renewable Energy Certificates do not in fact expire in 2027 then SEIT has an easy 6p gain per share ahead of it.
On top of anticipated gains discussed below.
CASH Of course there were negatives in the results. One I picked up on was the lower £84m investment cash inflow, down -£13m yoy. This included £40.2m capital returns from Onyx implying dividends and interest payments from holdings to TopCo were £43.8m in FY26.
This nearly marries with the operating cash flows of £45.6m (the £1.8m difference is the movement in the holdco interco balance I think). But given 1H26 was £31.4m that implies just £12.4m of operating cashflow in 2H26. That’s not great. WHY?
We are told due to re-investment and debt service. But project Level Debt barely changed in 2H26, so it wasn’t to make project-level debt principal paydowns, so it’s likely to be a timing issue for interest payments. The Project Debt levels appear to remain quite static but are muddied by the RCF being used to fund Onyx and Primary in prior periods, so I’m assuming Project Debt at Onyx particularly, in FY25 was included from the RCF.
ZOOD and Capshare add a further £29m project debt in FY26 A decent amount of £54.7m was re-invested in FY26, and although that figure appears much smaller than the invested amount of £173m in the prior year. However when you consider the large disposal proceeds in FY25, the amount is actually about the same net of disposals in both years.
£100.5m includes £15m of refinancing and £40m of capital repayments from Onyx. That gets us back to and reconciles with £45.6mm of operating cash flow. You see the accounts are quite easy to understand once you get to know them.
Given -£51.7m of dividends YTD and £45.6m op cash flow, no wonder they canned the fourth dividend.
SEIT blamed “bad timing”.
Pull the other one muttered detractors.
By about 8% per year.
Has ITDA changed?
Interest costs – yes. (I’m using the FY year end debt figures as a proxy for the calendar year so there’s a 3 month timing difference here)
So overall, no growing NET profits but a solid £50m income return per year (albeit an EBDA number) where you’re paying 7.5X for that net income. (ignoring FV gains and losses) and paying half of what you’d have paid a year ago.
Wait, what?
1 Red Rochester
EV/EBITDA was 20X so slightly below the 19.2X budgeted. It had new customers during the year and others expanding their energy use.
The outlook is centred on maintaining stable operational performance, embedding the benefits of the in-house management transition and on active customer engagement and execution of a few existing approved capital projects.
Growth is expected to be driven by incremental customer additions and expansions within Eastman Business Park. While several customer opportunities are advancing (including data centre prospects), uncertainty remains and outcomes will be dependent on customer timing, customer agreements, capital availability and broader market conditions.
The upgrade of air compressor systems at Kings Landing to reduce parasitic load and lower ongoing energy consumption at site will deliver “meaningful savings” in FY27 too.
2 Onyx
It continues amuse me that some claim SEIT would have “great difficulty” selling its assets at a decent price. Today’s headlines is that EDF has just sold $4.6bn of renewable assets to KKR.
Can Onyx and SEIT also sell energy assets during an AI Boom? I’m not even answering that.
$9.5m EBITDA for CY25. Big deal? That’s 20% below budget chortle detractors.
The hugely significant element of the FY26 disclosures was the operational element of the project equity. Just 35% of the total.
On the assumption that 100% of the project debt is operational (obviously if only 35% is then the future EBITDA is massively higher – but let’s assume not) then using the 2H26 EBITDA number you get to a run rate of $21.2m which would really be above the budget considering just the operational element of the project equity (of $128m).
We see steadily growing profits from Onyx period by period.
The CY25 target according to the FY2025 AR was 100 MW so 103 MW is above target in CY25. We see the pace slow in 2026 with 57 MW at notice to proceed (NTP) and 50 MW of new PPAs signed.
That’s the reason for the reduction in the NAV.
Focus on credit quality and optimising profit is prioritised over growth we are told in 2026. To quote a detractor who in the past invested in Ecofin and lost his money – and who mistakenly believes Onyx’s high-margin C&I are no better than the low-margin US solar parks he invested in.
The fact is in 2026 Onyx is turning down Walmart rather than get the sale at any price. And in any case a PPA IS a fixed price structure!
Onyx trebles its pace of project delivery in CY25:
Based on 209MW COD (being operational) as at 31/12/25 that implies 597MW total projects are underway (i.e. once all current projects are energised) so there remains 388MW of projects to follow – and then after that a further, slower growth from here.
A buyer could re-accelerate that rate of expansion if they wished.
Even the existing projects represent at least a tripling of EBITDA from here based on only achieving the same level of performance. The pace of activations tripled in CY25 vs CY24, 103MW energised vs 30MW in CY24.
114MW was operational as at 31/12/24 and generated 132.9 GWh in 2024 vs 145.1GWh in 2025. That means each MW generated 1,165 hours of MWh in 2024, on average, but that fell to 694 hours of MWh in 2025. A -35% reduction per MW. Why?
8% of the revenue model is asset management fees, with 5% from EPC (installation fees) and 2.5% from asset sales (buy outs of projects).
The other 84% of revenue comes from PPAs and energy credits.
So the reduction in generation hours must be due to underperformance of operational projects. When questioned SEIT explained revenue timings was a large factor, any many assets were energised late in the calendar year. That means the year end number will become the run rate number in 2026 and we can expect a large number. The weather is also blamed – and that’s far less easy to control however it also is driven by the quality of the asset management. If the panels are dusty then clean them quickly.
SEIT admit to continuing challenges with “site-specific issues” too. To tackle this Onyx introduced “GEM”, an acronym that reflects Onyx’s commitment to best-in-class quality. Short for “Great Expectations Met,” GEM guides how Onyx operates, shaping its processes, practices, and customer engagements to deliver reliable energy, rigorous asset care, exceptional service, and a culture of continuous improvement.
Onyx continues to embed a portfolio-wide quality and operational management framework. This includes enhanced construction quality controls, the use of tier one equipment with market standard warranties and standardised operating and maintenance procedures. Preferred contractors and OEM-approved repair processes are used across sites, with performance monitored through improved data and analytics tools.
What is certainly remarkable is the improvement to profitability per MWh of energy generated. $177.73 (which is 59,640 MWh in CY 2H25 and $10.6m of EBITDA profit)
EBITDA Profit per MWh at Onyx for the past two years The $10.6m EBITDA profit growth in 2H26 for Onyx can’t help leaving you feeling more optimistic about Onyx…..
What will this grow to in FY27?
3 Primary
Despite Cleveland Cliffs producing more steel and American Steel being bought by Nippon Steel this did not translate into vastly more profits for Primary – yet. Nevertheless Primary exceeded budget by 3%. It reduced its debt by £8m from £121m to £113m in the year to 31/3/26.
With $2m upside of projects being commissioned in FY27 and its PCI contract renewed for a further five years there are reasons to feel positive. Installation of variable frequency drives and new fan motors to reduce continuous parasitic electrical load from induced draft fans on generation processes will improve profits by +$1.5m a year, while installation of a control valve on the steam turbine extraction line to reduce excess feedwater heating, freeing steam for additional electrical generation will add +$0.4m revenue a year.
As a negative the NAV was reduced by Ohio State REC credits which might not be extended past 2026. The reduction assumes they don’t. The reduction also assumes there are no alternative markets for the REC credits – outside Ohio.
Meanwhile Primary has actually applied for more REC credits (for Steam energy). Nothing is in the price for this so what was a NAV cut back could be a double bubble add back in FY27.
In any case until CY 2H25 Primary has increased in value over the past two years, but receives a -$25m negative downgrade in these latest results, alongside four of the top five assets:
Asset fair value gains and losses period by CY period (and in local currency)
4 Driva
Driva performed ahead of expectations (14% ahead of budget) despite higher customer churn – and was revalued upwards as seen above.
Driva manages a gas grid in Stockholm extending roughly 540km, backed by a 200-tonne storage terminal at Högdalen (boasting 100MW of regasification capacity) and a 40-tonne backup facility at Frihamnen.
Rather than distributing the contents of an LNG tanker Driva distributes 88% locally produced renewable biogas, primarily sourced from the city’s wastewater treatment facilities. Poop poop. This aligns directly with Stockholm’s regional strategy to hit carbon neutrality by 2040, and therefore is a key asset to the Swedish government. In FY26 it launched an energy-as-a-service arm achieving a number of wins during the year:
— Biogas‑as‑a‑Service (“BaaS”) project at Arvid Nordqvist in the first half of 2025, enabling biogas to be used in the roasting of coffee beans;
— ten Charger‑as‑a‑Service (“CaaS”) sites reaching operation, of which eight were associated with bus depots;
— one new Solar‑as‑a‑Service (“SaaS”) project achieving operations early in the year;
— 14 Heating‑as‑a‑Service (“HaaS”) projects becoming operational during the year.
5 Oliva
The hidden value is the Spanish electricity market. Bit jagged?
Quite why they didn’t do this years ago is beyond me but someone twigged that Oliva can deliver base-load electrical power and ancillary services began in July 2025. The upside to this strategy is dampened by its hedging strategy. Less risky that way.
The effect is obvious with profits more than tripling in 2H26, helped along by a better harvest of Olives too.
EBITDA Profits in Euro Millions This is further reflected in its EBITDA per MWh of generation (NB we don’t know the heat/electricity split)
So leaving aside the exceptional CY23 result buoyed by the post Ukraine energy price surge in Europe Oliva is delivering a steady result where the CY25 hides a much stronger second half and outlook for CY2026.
We see a growing result in 2H26 to 31/3/26.
And that’s largely driven by simply getting better prices per MWh.
Valuation Thoughts: The results are not a slam dunk but they never are. Victories are hard won and setbacks are always around the corner.
The -50% drop appears to be unjustified.
The cautious approach to kitchen sinking 6p of FV losses for events that haven’t even happened and might never happen is certainly one way to prepare for the worst. I thought the SEIT investment management team in their presentation of the FY26 results appeared to have the look of an embattled and frustrated group.
The FY26 results on the face of things allow people to say “told you so”. The headline is a -12.8p loss
Scratch beneath the surface and there’s more to it – in my opinion.
If you strip out the “noise” and focus on its PHYSICAL income/distributions, on today’s 35p share price SEIT consistently delivered a 12.5% yield net of fund expenses and adjustments. (4p per share vs a 35p share). Also those are post-leverage distributions, so net of project debt servicing and amortisation.
This is a Pence Per Share analysis where 5p a year less fund costs delivers 4p a year a 12.5% gross yield to today’s 35p share price The top 5 assets appear to offer upside to their income capabilities in FY27.
Fund expenses have now been reduced, and RCF interest will reduce too. Post period a sale of Kyotherm assets has reduced the RCF by £45m to c.£190m, with another £40m of cash being held on the balance sheet.
Loss of income from Kyotherm was around 20% of EBITDA (£91m was pro-forma £72m) but EBITDA growth particularly from Onyx should at least partly offset this in FY27.
The RCF equates to about 17.5p per share so income eventually pays it down although the sale of any of the top 5 assets will speed that greatly.
Considering the NAV Let’s not forget that while SEIT didn’t load the discount rate any higher 9.5% remains an eyewatering level to discount future income by in arriving at valuations. It’s not as though these are being valued at ~8% like NESF, TRIG, and Greencoat UKW.
That’s £100m’s wiped out the NAV simply by discounting everything severely.
Let’s also not forget there’s 6p per share of assumed losses built into that £740m NAV ….that’s about £60m of losses that have not even happened – yet.
SEIT assume £60m of losses for “might happen” stuff Where the assets are largely achieving their targeted performance:
And where the amortising project debt is at undemanding interest rate and is largely fixed or hedged.
Let’s also consider history. Historically SEIT has disposed of assets at a premium or at a small discount. There’s an AI boom after all?
And EV/EBITDA multiples for Green Energy are heading up say Finerva…. meaning sales are potentially much higher than the past year or so.
And Energy prices including electricity prices are up everywhere not least in the USA.
HAIRCUT TIME?
As the chart above shows, there appears to be a large margin of safety, where asset sales into the realm of ‘alf price guv’nor would be catastrophic and drop the SEIT share price into the high 20p’s…. But anything short of that and there’s upside to 35p a share…. IMO.
AND THAT NAV RETURN ASSUMES NOTHING FOR INCOME WHICH IS 22% per annum or more – on paper – and £50m out of £380m market cap (12.5% yield) in practice.
Conclusion Personally I was backing up the truck at 32p and I could not believe my luck. Has the actual results mirrored my “SEIT is half full”? Not precisely, but broadly, yes. No great profit warning. A lot of kitchen sinking and a punishing discount rate. My “official” position is this is part of the OB 25 for 25 ideas and I’m in for 42.6p.
It’s my view that there’s clear upside from here and this article sets out why. Will it require patience? Yes, but I think some pleasant surprises are lurking. I don’t believe the asset market is as sclerotic as in past years. Also remember SEIT are not selling a “partnership” into things like Onyx as they did last year – they are now selling a going concern…………………………