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How much income would an ISA need to match the State Pension?

Ever wondered what size an ISA portfolio is required to add up to as much as the State Pension? This Fool crunches the numbers and reveals all.

Posted by Andrew Mackie

Published 4 February

GLEN

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services.

Today, the State Pension pays £11,502 a year. The obvious question is what size ISA it would take to generate the same income independently – effectively doubling retirement income for someone who also qualifies for the full State Pension.

The drawdown maths

Once the contribution phase of an ISA ends and withdrawals begin, the challenge becomes simple in theory but tricky in practice: balancing portfolio growth with a sustainable income.

The chart below illustrates this. The blue line assumes contributions stop today and a portfolio is already in place. That portfolio supports a State Pension-matched withdrawal every year until age 90.

I assume the State Pension grows at 4.5% a year, inflation runs at 2%, and the remaining portfolio delivers a conservative 4% annual return. During drawdown, protecting capital matters more than chasing high growth. Under these assumptions, the portfolio required is £240,000.

Chart generated by author

Chart generated by author

Future contributions

The picture changes if you’re still in the accumulation phase. To illustrate, let’s assume an investor is 45 and planning ahead.

Because the State Pension is assumed to rise by 4.5% a year, its annual value in 20 years would be close to £27,000.

That’s where the orange line comes in. As the chart shows, only one trajectory supports a pension-matched withdrawal through to age 90. In this scenario, the required portfolio rises to around £550,000.

Long-term thinking

Reaching a £550,000 portfolio value within a 20-year investing time frame is certainly a challenge. But I believe it’s achievable with a carefully selected portfolio of high-growth stocks and low-volatility dividend stocks.

In the former category, the energy transition provides investors with an opportunity for exposure to a trend that’s still very much in its infancy.

One metal is at the heart of the energy transition: copper and mining giant Glencore (LSE: GLEN) is positioning itself to be one of the biggest copper producers on the planet over the next decade.

The recent merger talks with Rio Tinto highlight the strong position in which the miner’s portfolio puts it. While the deal is far from certain, it underscores how valuable its copper assets are viewed by its bigger peer.

When it reports later this month, copper output will be in the region of 850,000 tonnes. By 2035, its targeting output of 1.6m.

Over the past year, copper prices have exploded 40%. This isn’t only down to increasing demand but also reflects extremely tight supply.

Chile is the undisputed king when it comes to copper production accounting for over a quarter of global production. But new discoveries are becoming increasingly harder to come by and ore grades are in long-term decline.

That said, the recent run-up in the stock can be directly attributable to merger talks. Even if an agreement is reached, a merger of this size brings with it huge risks. Rio Tinto is a pureplay conventional miner, whereas Glencore’s roots are in trading. Marrying such different corporate cultures could potentially result in a larger cost base.

Bottom line

There are many ways for investors to gain exposure to the biggest macro themes of the day including electrification, onshoring and the AI arms race. But for me the greatest value today lies not in the technologies themselves but upstream: sourcing the critical minerals that turn bold ambitions into reality. That’s why Glencore earns a place in my ISA portfolio and could be worth considering.

Remember : a bad plan is better than no plan but a plan without an end destination is still bad plan as it relies on luck.

The Holy Grail of Investing

The holy grail of investing is when you have a share in your Snowball that has returned all your capital, either thru share price appreciation and or dividends. You take out your capital and you have then achieved the Holy Grail of Investing in that you have a share that provides income at a zero, zilch cost and then you can re-invest the capital released, into another high yielding share and try to do it all again.

The current meaning of ‘ Share’ is Investment Trusts (CEF’s) or ETF’s. Currently the SNOWBALL invests mainly in Investment Trusts because some have a discount to NAV, with luck and if you

perseverance may pay off.

The current best share in the SNOWBALL is SUPR, where we have earned two years of dividends. A long road ahead, full of bumps and twists and turns before the Snowball achieves the Holy Grail of Investing.

The worst aspect of having a Snowball, is that you sometimes you wish your life away as you wait for the next dividend, so you can re-invest.

When you start to spend your dividends that problem will disappear, like snow on a summer’s day.

Across the pond

Where Do REITs Fit into a Buffett-less Berkshire?

By Brad Thomas, Wide Moat Research February 2

I was recently reminded of Warren Buffett’s famous speech to Masters of Business Administration students at the University of Florida in October 1998: the one where he emphasized one of his most famous principles…

“Don’t lose money.

It’s a great line – one of many from the Oracle of Omaha. And I’m glad that’s what still stands out today after all these years.

Not the part where he put real estate investment trusts (“REITs”) through the verbal wringer, saying:

REITs have, in effect, created a conduit so you don’t get the double taxation, but they also generally have fairly high operating expenses.

… let’s just say you can buy fairly simple types of real estate at an 8% yield or thereabouts, and you take away close to 1% to 1.5% by the time you count stock options and everything. It is not a terribly attractive way to own real estate.

Maybe [that’s] the only way a guy with $1,000 or $5,000 can own it. But if you have $1 million or $10 million, you are better off owning the real estate properties yourself instead of sticking some intermediary in between who will get a sizable piece of the return for himself.

Buffett wasn’t finished, adding:

REITs have behaved horribly in this market, as you know. And it isn’t at all inconceivable that they become a class that would get so unpopular that they would sell at significant discounts from what you could sell the properties for.

Moreover, even if they did improve as a class, he wondered, “whether management would fight you in that process because they would be giving up their income stream for managing things and their interests might run counter to the shareholders on that.”

But this REIT rebuke?

This wasn’t one of them. In fact, Buffett himself went on to recognize the error of his ways.

Berkshire’s Billboard REIT Bet Is Paying Off

Some of you may remember my August 2025 article titled, “Buffett Bets on Billboards.” In it, I reported how his Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-A)(BRK-B) had just disclosed its investment into Lamar Advertising (LAMR).

Lamar is a REIT. A billboard REIT, to be specific.

Most anyone who drives along major thoroughfares throughout the U.S. has seen its signage towering above the landscape. Those ads direct you to the Chick-fil-A or McDonald’s at the next exit… a lawyer you can call if you’ve been hurt at work… or a jeweler at the outlets 20 minutes down the road.

Lamar has been in the billboard business for more than 100 years now, so it obviously has some staying power. And Berkshire recognized that in the second quarter of 2025 by buying up 1,169,507 shares and then again in the third quarter of 2025 with another 32,603.

Since that first purchase, Lamar has returned around 14%, outperforming the Vanguard Real Estate Index Fund (VNQ), a fairly reliable REIT benchmark.

That wasn’t the biggest purchase Berkshire ever made, of course. But it did mark a major shift in attitude toward REITs.

Nor was it Buffett’s first foray into REITs. His holding company purchased shares in Seritage Growth Properties (SRG), a spinoff from Sears, in 2015. That was a special sort of situation, admittedly, but it was still holding shares.

And in 2017, Berkshire bought a sizable 18.6 million shares in STORE Capital (formerly STOR), a prominent mall REIT that was publicly traded at the time. It then backed the truck up on that decision in the second quarter of 2020 – at the heart of the COVID-19 lockdowns – with another 5.79 million shares.

Could we see more REIT purchases from Berkshire? That’s what I’m wondering, especially now that Buffett has stepped down and there’s new management at the helm.

The ‘Youth’ Factor

Mere weeks ago, on New Year’s Day, Warren Buffett made history by stepping down from managing Berkshire Hathaway’s day-to-day operations… 60 years after he first accepted the CEO role.

Everyone knows the legend he has become, the money he has made, and the wisdom he has provided. But even the best races have to come to an end eventually, and sometimes they need to.

Buffett, who is still chairman, can probably use a bit of a break. He is 95, after all.

Not to say that his successor, Greg Abel, is a spring chicken at 63. One of Buffett’s key lieutenants for the past 25 years, he has been instrumental in acquisitions such as MidAmerican Energy – now Berkshire Hathaway Energy – and overseen important aspects of many other company holdings.

But that combination of experience and comparative “freshness” is probably precisely what a well-established giant like Berkshire needs in a world of artificial intelligence (“AI”), cryptocurrencies, and other alternative investments.

We’ve also long-since crossed the point of REIT profitability. When Buffett talked about them in that speech 28 years ago, the asset class was still in its infancy, with a market capitalization of around $126 billion.

It has since mushroomed to over $1.4 trillion, undeniably erasing Buffett’s prediction that REITs could “get so unpopular… they would sell at significant discounts.”

These real estate companies have also become their own broader investment universe. REITs were formally moved out of the financials sector under the Global Industry Classification Standard and into their own real estate sector in 2016. And they’ve added new categories like cell towers, data centers, farming, timber, and single-family rentals – which I wrote about recently.

Better yet, over the past 30 years, REITs have delivered strong double‑digit average annual total returns of about 12% across the various subsectors. This places them among the top-performing major asset classes over multidecade periods.

In short, there are plenty of solid, safe, and growing opportunities. And Abel, who might very well have been behind last year’s Lamar purchase, is young enough to more readily forgive REITs their bumpy beginnings.

Source: Wide Moat Research

The Bottom Line

Regardless of what real estate decisions Berkshire makes from here, our team at Wide Moat Research remains laser-focused on REITs – the ones that enjoy durable competitive advantages. So we’ll keep meeting with management teams that create value for their companies, their clients, and their shareholders alike.

To reference Warren Buffett one more time, if you don’t “have $1 million or $10 million” to own “real estate properties yourself”… along with the proper knowledge, wisdom, and time to make that money count…

REITs really can be a great way to own real estate. I’m confident this year will showcase plenty of examples of how worthwhile they can be.

All you need to know about investing.

Warren Buffett once called these stocks’ dividend growth “as certain as birthdays.” Here’s how they’re doing.

Story by William Dahl

Key Points

  • In his 2022 annual letter, Warren Buffett invited readers to “peek behind the curtain” to understand Berkshire Hathaway’s success.
  • Almost immediately, he singled out two stocks.
  • Three years after he called their dividend growth “as certain as birthdays,” their payouts have risen by 21% and 91%.

In his 2022 annual letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, Warren Buffett had no shortage of good news to tout. Since he took the helm of Berkshire in 1964, the conglomerate had notched a 3,787,464% gain, compared to 24,708% for the S&P 500 — enough to turn every $1 initially invested into $37,875.

Yet the first number he brought up, apart from calling his capital allocation decisions in his 58-year tenure “so-so,” was to cite two investments that he said were central to Berkshire’s success.

These two companies, each of which Berkshire coincidentally had invested $1.3 billion into, now paid annual dividends amounting to almost half of Berkshire’s initial investment. This yield on cost was, Buffett predicted, highly likely to grow thanks to dividend hikes.

A line of hundred dollar bills seemingly sprout from the ground.

A line of hundred dollar bills seemingly sprout from the ground.© Getty Images

Of course, this was more than three years ago. What were the two dividend stocks that Buffett felt deserved a special mention? And was his confidence in them well-placed?

1. Coca-Cola

Buffett established his position in soft drink giant Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) over a seven-year period, buying his 400 millionth share in August 1994.

He hasn’t bought a share since, but neither has he sold. And there’s a good reason.

In 1994, Berkshire was receiving $75 million a year in dividends from Coca-Cola. During the next 28 years, as the dividend increased each year, that number swelled to $704 million in 2022.

Today, Coca-Cola shares yield 2.8%. But while the $1.3 billion Buffett paid for his investment remains fixed, the annual dividend’s continued growth pushed his yield on cost up to almost 50%. That’s a remarkable feat considering that the S&P 500 has averaged annual returns of 10.5% during the past 70 years.

And since Buffett’s 2022 letter, the dividend had been boosted each year as he predicted. Those 400 million shares now pay Berkshire $206 million a year in dividends, at least until this March, when the company’s next quarterly dividend will go out after its expected 64th annual dividend increase.

2. American Express

Today, American Express shares yield less than 1%, as a 191% gain in share price during the last five years has pushed the yield down. But to Buffett, I suspect his yield on cost is far more important. Annual dividends, which totaled $302 million in 2022, have now grown to $577 million, or almost half of Buffett’s initial investment.

Can they keep it up?

Coca-Cola’s management doesn’t release dividend forecasts. However, with more than 50 years of dividend growth to its name, it has won the title of Dividend King, which barely one in 1,000 companies have achieved. Because management will be loathe to give that up, it’s very likely to announce yet another dividend hike next month, especially since it achieved robust earnings growth of 30% year over year last quarter.

Cruise Deals - We Won't Be Beaten On Price - Cruise 118 | Cruise Holidays

Cruise Deals – We Won’t Be Beaten On Price – Cruise 118 | Cruise Holidays

In the case of American Express, the company increased its annual card fees for the 29th consecutive quarter in Q3, and we’ll see if the trend persists in its Q4 earnings call scheduled for Jan. 30. With earnings up 19% year over year, the company should have no difficulty raising its dividend, especially considering how its $2.3 billion in share repurchases means that the company will be mailing checks on fewer shares

With fundamentals and track records like these, you can see why Buffett highlighted Coca-Cola and American Express as examples of “the secret sauce” behind Berkshire’s stunning success. And as in 2022, their payouts look highly likely to rise in the years ahead.

If you haven’t got 40 years to your retirement, investing in shares that yield 1.8%, will not pay for that cruise you promised yourself, so you will have to take a higher risk and buy shares that have a higher starting yield.

Are activists coming for your investment trust – and should you care?

MoneyWeek

Story by Holly Mead

Activist investors takeover concept investment trust

Activist investors takeover concept investment trust© Getty Images

Investment trusts are popular among DIY investors but activist investor Saba Capital Management may have rattled some nerves as it starts the new year with a bang.

Already it has initiated a second attempt to oust the board of Edinburgh Worldwide, but the proposals were rejected. It has also revealed a 5.3% stake in GCP Infrastructure, and seemingly got its way on converting Smithson to an open-ended fund.

Saba, a New York-based hedge fund group, launched its unprecedented campaign in December 2024 and is only gaining momentum. It has proposed to replace boards, narrow discounts and shake-up strategies.

While some experts have questioned Saba’s motives, others say some kind of intervention was overdue: boards had become complacent, with discounts too wide, performance lacklustre, and fees uncompetitive.

Could Saba pursue more close-ended funds ?

Why are activists interested in trusts?

Saba, run by former Deutsche Bank trader Boaz Weinstein, has stakes in 46 of the 305 UK-listed investment trusts, with positions of at least 10% in 16 of them. Its biggest stakes are in Herald Investment Trust (30.7% as of mid-January) and Edinburgh Worldwide (30.1%).

But it is not the only activist in town. Allspring has stakes in 46 investment trusts, and 1607 Capital Partners in 40, according to wealth manager AJ Bell. Plenty more are operating on a smaller scale.

A wide discount is often likely to pique an activist’s interest. Investment trusts trade at two prices: the net asset value (NAV) is the value of its underlying assets divided by the number of shares, and the share price, which is what investors actually pay to buy and sell shares.

When the share price is higher than the NAV, the trust is trading at a premium. When it is below the NAV, it is trading at a discount. At a 10% discount to NAV, investors can effectively purchase 100p worth of assets for 90p. If the discount closes, they make a profit – this is often the main goal of an activist.

Large discounts and vulnerable trusts

There may be reason to worry about trust discounts. Look out for trusts that have persistently underperformed their peers and are trading on a wider discount than their sector average. For example, the average discount in the Global sector is 8%, but Lindsell Train’s is 21.3%. Over three years, the trust has returned -27.7% versus a sector average of 37.9%, Trustnet data sh

Consider sectors, too. Just three of the 19 trusts in the UK Equity Income sector have beaten the market over ten years. This could make the group a target as investors may be more likely to ditch underperforming active investments in favour of passive ones that track the market.

Dan Coatsworth, head of markets at AJ Bell, suggests Scottish American as potentially vulnerable; an underperformer trading at a 9.2% discount, significantly wider than the 3.1% average for its Global Equity Income sector. Coatsworth says: “The trust is managed by Baillie Gifford, which runs various other trusts already subject to campaigns by Saba. The activist might feel compelled to turn the screws on Baillie Gifford given the latest Edinburgh Worldwide defeat.”

Some infrastructure trusts are being targeted because their assets are in demand but the sector is not popular with investment trust users.

Thomas McMahon, head of investment companies research at Kepler Partners, says: “In this scenario, a better return can be made by selling the assets or buying back large amounts of stock, rather than investing in the portfolio. Sometimes external activists can see this more clearly, while the manager may have their head in the sand.”

Watch for notifications. A trust must alert the stock exchange if their holding in a company passes 3%, and then each time that stake moves up or down by 100 basis points. That should mean the arrival of an activist doesn’t come as a surprise.

This can be more difficult to gauge if the shares are owned through other vehicles or derivatives, says McMahon, but investment boards and market commentators can help decipher these holdings.

While the arrival of an activist can cause a stir, it isn’t necessarily a sell signal. Depending on their motivations, activist investors can be a force for good.

James Carthew, co-founder of Quoted Data, says: “When you have a strategy that isn’t working and investors are selling but the board isn’t taking action, then someone pushing for change can be a good thing.”

He points to Alliance Trust as one example. After the activist Elliott appeared on its register, major changes were made to the running of the trust, which eventually merged with Witan. “That was a catalyst for positive change,” says Carthew.

Even if an activist’s proposals are not passed, their presence can jolt a board into action. That can be seen in the industry’s behaviour since Saba emerged. The average discount has narrowed from 15% at the end of 2024 to 12% today, according to the Association of Investment Companies (AIC), an industry body.

Annabel Brodie-Smith, communications director at the AIC, says: “Boards have been taking steps to protect themselves. Last year saw a record 27 deals, including mergers, acquisitions and liquidations. It was also a record year for share buybacks and fee changes.“

But Saba has been accused of trying to make a quick buck, rather than pushing for meaningful changes in the long-term interests of shareholders. Carthew says: “Normally activists don’t buy enormous stakes and try to force things to happen. They buy smaller stakes, suggest ideas and take other shareholders along with them.”

To determine whether an activist has shareholders’ best interests at heart, look at their track record to see what they have done before. Read their proposals and the response from the investment trust board to get a feel for both sides.

Weigh up their motivations against your own and don’t get distracted by a potential short-term gain. Look at CQS Natural Resources, says Carthew: the trust announced a tender offer last May, giving investors the option to sell at NAV. Its discount had already narrowed from 15% to 5%, but many investors exited. But the share price has since doubled, giving those who stayed a far more significant gain.

Why investors should vote

Consider why you hold the trust. If your original reasons for investing still stand, don’t get side-tracked, and be sure to vote on any proposals. Brodie-Smith says: “Remember that investment trusts are not for a quick buck, they provide a long-term approach to investing, and many offer consistent and rising income over time.”

With so much drama surrounding the industry, some investors could be tempted to eschew trusts altogether. Carthew believes that would be a mistake. Activists are a normal and healthy part of the market and, while they create a lot of noise, they are a relatively small piece of the pie.

Investing in potential activist targets could even be a good strategy, says McMahon, if their goal is to unlock value. Coatsworth adds: “Boards have realised that trusts cannot limp along and hope for the best – when something isn’t working, the alternatives must be explored.”

Maybe a Trust that pays you a dividend ? Just in case Mr. Market doesn’t care about your research

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