
How investment trusts can support your income goals…
Kepler Trust Intelligence
Updated 21 Apr 2023
Generating a reliable income has always been one of the foremost goals of investors. Younger investors tend to invest for capital growth but that starts to change as they get older.
Instead of wanting to generate large capital gains, they’re much more likely to want their investments to pay out so they can have cash to use during retirement.
Although generating income from your investments is a straightforward goal, there are lots of ways that investors go about trying to achieve it.
It might mean they focus their efforts on bonds, stocks, or alternative investments, like real estate or private debt. There’s also nothing to stop people from mixing things up and having holdings in a range of assets that they believe will generate income.
Investing in bonds for income
In the past, the bond market was typically seen as the go-to for income investors. As bonds are usually structured to pay out a fixed sum of cash at regular intervals and over a set period of time, they’re often regarded as offering a mix of reliability and, if they are issued by a reliable counterparty, low risk to income investors.
Bond investors have had a strange time since the financial crisis in the late 2000s. Many central banks set their interest rates close to zero in the wake of the crisis. This meant government bonds from countries like the US and UK, the traditional go-to for many investors, offered anaemic yields.
However, this started to change in late 2021. Central banks came under pressure to raise interest rates to try and stem the wave of inflation, which emerged in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. As a result, lower risk bonds, such as treasuries and gilts, are now offering more attractive yields than they have in over a decade.
This may mean we will see a shift back into these assets, after a long period in which they did not offer much to make them appealing for investors.
It’s also worth remembering that the bond market is much broader than those issued by a few governments in developed markets. Companies and governments across the world issue bonds and many of these yield comparatively high returns.
The problem is they do tend to carry more risk with them. Investors should take note of these risks prior to investing, given that the likelihood of default – and investment losses – are commensurately higher.
Investing in stocks for income
One consequence of the low yields in government bonds that we saw after the financial crisis was a move towards equity markets.
Equities have always been a source of income for investors, so that’s not to say this was new territory for them. But it did mean income investors had more exposure to stocks than they might have in the past.
Typically income investors put their cash into larger, blue-chip stocks. In the UK, that has usually meant firms like Unilever, HSBC, or Shell.
The reason for this is fairly straightforward. Large, established companies don’t tend to have ambitious, capital-intensive growth plans, meaning they’re less likely to reinvest their earnings and can pay dividends instead.
For those investors looking for the level of reliability that government bonds provided in the past, larger businesses are also perceived as offering a measure of stability. Rightly or wrongly, investors tend to believe these companies will be around for a while, earning stable revenues and paying out predictable dividends.
This is, of course, just a rule of thumb and there are still large companies that don’t pay dividends and smaller ones that do. But income investors do usually like stability and predictability, something that we tend to see as a feature of larger firms.
Income investing using alternative investments
Alternative investments is a broad term that could refer to anything from fine art collections to a hedge fund.
For private investors it usually means investing in things like real estate, debt products, or commodities.
Obviously not all of these are easily accessible, nor do they all provide a source of income – a gold bar remains a gold bar, no matter how long you hold it for, so you aren’t going to get any dividends from it.
Probably the most popular alternative investment option for regular investors is real estate. A house or flat can generate rental income that’s reasonably reliable and predictable. It’s also more readily accessible to a regular investor compared to a large-scale private equity investment.
Still, buying a home for investment purposes is likely to be out of reach for many people. That’s why regular investors, looking for income, may invest in a fund that holds alternative assets instead.
Doing so is cheaper and simpler than attempting to go it alone. For instance, if you want to invest in commercial real estate you’ll need a huge amount of money. Investing in a fund that pools together a large amount of money and then invests in commercial real estate is a much more realistic option for most people.
Using investment trusts for income
This is one reason that investment trusts appeal to income investors. Income-producing alternative assets are much more easily accessible through a trust than they would be if an investor wanted to do it alone.
And the various trusts listed in the UK offer a broad range of alternative assets to investors. For instance, TwentyFour Income (TFIF) tries to generate income by investing in asset-backed debt securities. Alternatively, Greencoat Capital operates two investment trusts that attempt to generate income from investments in renewable energy infrastructure.
Beyond these more niche investments, trusts can also generate income from investing in traditional asset classes, like bonds and equities.
Some investors may choose trusts that invest in these because they’re focused on markets that are hard to access for retail investors. For instance, regular investors may find it almost impossible to purchase shares in some East Asian countries themselves. Similarly, buying certain corporate or government bonds can be difficult to do alone.
But this obviously isn’t true across the board. UK stocks are, for instance, pretty easy for regular investors to access themselves, so why bother with a trust?
One reason is they offer access to professional portfolio managers. Stock picking isn’t a simple task and many people find it more convenient to hand the reins over to someone else.
This is particularly the case if you have a specific goal in mind, like generating income, and don’t want to take on the risk of managing it yourself. Anyone considering this should keep in mind that trust’s that have a particular style or purpose often have a lot of overlap, in terms of the assets they hold, so it’s worth checking that you’re not doubling up by buying shares in several trusts.
Trusts also tend to have diversified portfolios and thus offer investors the ability to access a mix of assets through one investment. This may be particularly appealing if an investor has a specific goal in mind, as the trust can act as something of a ‘one stop shop’ for them. Rather than having to pick a whole basket of assets themselves to meet that goal, they can just buy one share in the trust.
How investment trusts can help income investors
Aside from the actual investment process, trusts have unique structural benefits which make them particularly suitable for income focused investors.
Trusts are legally required to pay out 85% of the dividends they receive. For real estate investment trusts the figure is 90%.
The remaining 15% or 10% can be kept in reserve and used to smooth out payments during rough patches in the market. Open-ended investment companies must pay out all of their income, meaning they don’t have this benefit.
The benefit of being able to keep income in reserve was on display during the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020. Whereas many firms were forced to slash dividends or cut them entirely, close to 90% of investment trusts maintained or increased their payouts.
That was possible in large part because of the reserves that many trusts have built up over the years. For income investors, many of whom are partial to that mix of stability and predictability, this ability to retain dividends is thus a very attractive feature.
Income from capital
Another benefit that trusts have for income investors, which complements the above, is the ability to pay dividends from their capital reserves. In simpler terms, this means they can pay a dividend to their shareholders by converting some of the capital growth generated by their investments into an income.
Generally income paid from capital reserves is undertaken in line with a specific dividend policy. This will usually be an agreement by the trust to pay out dividends as a percentage of the trust’s net asset value (NAV).
This may be done once a year or more frequently. For example, Invesco Perpetual UK Smaller Companies (IPU) has a policy of paying out a dividend that’s equal to 4% of its NAV at the year end. JPMorgan Japan Small Cap Growth & Income (JSGI) takes a different approach by paying out 1% of NAV at the end of each quarter. And International Biotechnology (IBT) pays a dividend equal to 4% of NAV at the end of its financial year, but in two instalments, one in January and the other in August.
Trusts can mix and match in meeting these commitments. For instance, half the payout may come from dividends generated by the trust’s holdings, whereas the other half may come from capital reserves.
It’s worth keeping in mind that paying out of capital reserves carries some risk with it. Selling off assets to meet dividend requirements can depress a trust’s NAV, something that can make a bad situation worse if a trust has had a period of poor performance.
That may not please income investors but then they’ve still got plenty of options open to them. And in the long-run, they’d likely be better off choosing an income-focused trust, rather than one that’s decided to adopt a dividend policy which may not be best-suited to its investment strategy.
Why a closed pool of capital helps investment trusts
The investment trust structure is also key to their being able to invest in more niche areas of the market that can produce income.
A closed pool of capital means the buying and selling of trust shares doesn’t impact a trust’s underlying portfolio. This means that trusts are freer than open-ended funds, which must contend with redemptions, to invest in more illiquid assets.
As discussed above, this might include areas like renewable energy infrastructure or commercial property. But there are more specialized areas too.
Accessing these sorts of funds outside of the investment trust market is tricky and trusts’ structure is a key reason for that.
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