Investment Trust Dividends

Author: admin (Page 327 of 381)

TENT

Triple Point Energy Transition plc

(“TENT”, the “Company” or together with its subsidiaries, the “Group”)

Completion of Asset Sale

Triple Point Energy Transition plc (ticker: TENT), is pleased to announce that the sale of an LED Facility described in the Circular sent on 5 March 2024, and approved by Shareholders on 22 March 2024, has completed.

The sale has been transacted with TP Leasing Limited (“TPLL“), a member of the group of the Company’s investment manager Triple Point Investment Management LLP and will result in a return of £2.1m to the Company, representing the outstanding loan balance.

Background

In September 2023, the Group, via TENT Holdings Limited, provided a £2.3 million receivables financing facility to Boxed Light Services Limited (“Boxed“) (the “LED Facility“). Boxed installs efficient LED lights and controls at Places for People Homes Limited sites, part of the Places for People group, one of the UK’s leading social enterprises. 

John Roberts, the Company’s Chair commented:

“We are delighted with this strong start to TENT’s orderly realisation process, which was approved by shareholders on Friday 22 March 2024. The completion of this sale reduces the number of investments within the Group’s portfolio from 19 to 18 investments. We will continue to update the market on the orderly realisation process and on our plans for returning capital to shareholders.”

RECI

RECI” or the “Company”)

Successor Buyback Programme

The Board of Directors of Real Estate Credit Investments Limited announces that, having reviewed the current circumstances and assessed the Company’s level and allocation of cash available for deployment, it intends to undertake a further buyback programme (the “Programme“) which will run to 30 September 2024. The aggregate purchase price of all shares acquired under the Programme will be no greater than £10.0 million.  The Company’s initial buyback programme will expire on 31 March 2024.

The Company’s initial buyback programme was announced on 31 August 2023, with an aggregate purchase price of all shares purchased of no more than £5.0 million. Pursuant to that programme, a total of 4,095,000 ordinary shares of no par value each (“Ordinary Shares“) were purchased for treasury for an aggregate amount of £5.0 million. Ordinary Shares were repurchased under the initial programme at an average discount to net asset value per share of 16.2%, with the Company’s Ordinary Shares trading at an average discount of 14.1% from 31 August 2023 to 25 March 2024 (the date of the last share repurchase under the programme).

The Programme will occur within the limitations of RECI’s existing general authority to purchase no more than 34,376,938 Ordinary Shares as granted by shareholders at the Company’s annual general meeting held on 15 September 2023 (with such authority sought to be renewed at the Company’s 2024 annual general meeting to allow the Programme to extend to 30 September 2024).

The Company has appointed Liberum Capital Limited (“Liberum“) to make market purchases of Ordinary Shares in respect of the Programme. Liberum will purchase the Ordinary Shares as principal (and not as agent) and sell them on to the Company. The Company intends that any Ordinary Shares purchased by the Company will be held in treasury. 

Any share purchases will be made in accordance with certain pre-set parameters set out in the terms of Liberum’s engagement, the general authority of the Company to repurchase shares granted by shareholders at the Company’s 2023 annual general meeting (and in due course the 2024 AGM); and the EU Market Abuse Regulation (596/2014) as it forms part of domestic law by virtue of section 3 of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 (as amended); and Chapter 12 of the Financial Conduct Authority’s Listing Rules.

The maximum price payable per share (exclusive of expenses) must not exceed the higher of: (i) 105% of the average middle market quotations for the five business days preceding the date of purchase; and (ii) the higher of the last independent trade and the highest current independent bid on the London Stock Exchange.

The Snowball ten year plan

The blog ‘s plan is to invest 100k of seed capital in a portfolio of Investment Trusts that pay a dividend.

Now u may not have a spare 100k laying around and if u do u may not want to commit that amount of money.

The blog portfolio intends to earn a ‘pension’ of between 14 and 16k within ten years, currently year 2 where the portfolio is ahead of target.

No new funds will be added to the portfolio but u may be willing to add funds as the portfolio achieves it’s yearly fcast.

As interest rates fall, let’s assume when u want to take an income from your investments an annuity is available at 4%.

U would need to increase your 100k of seed capital to 400k and surrender all your capital for the privilege.

GL with that if that’s your chosen option.

I forgot to mention that the blog portfolio whilst providing a ‘pension’ u will also have all your capital to withdraw, if your circumstances change.

I’ll do a review of the portfolio, the fcast and the target at the end of the first quarter this weekend.

Current cash to re-invest £830.00, with a further £470 to be added to the Snowball tomorrow.

Chart of the day

The share has fallen down to a support area.

The options.

U can buy for the 8.8% yield hoping that support holds, knowing that u have bought at a better price than those catching a falling knife.

The thread price is 92.7p including charges, that’s the risk, the further u trade away from a support area.

U can watch to see if it continues to fall, with the fall back position that u could buy lower down or if it trades back up thru support.

U can wait and if it bounces buy, accepting a slightly lower yield.

U could buy something else.

The glorious uncertainty of share trading.

Passive Income

The Motley Fool

Simon Watkins

£0 in savings? Here’s how I’d turn that into £7,895 a month of passive income
Passive income is money earned from minimal daily effort.

And anyone with an income can make it and then turn it into a sizeable investment pot, in my view.

The way I did it initially was to invest around 20% of whatever I earned into shares that paid dividends.

The current median average salary in the UK is £34,963 a year, so after taxes it would leave £28,245. This is around £2,354 a month, so 20% of that is about £471 a month.

Big things have small beginnings
Using the UK average salary example, £471 a month could be invested into one of several high-dividend-paying FTSE 100 stocks.
British American Tobacco (LSE: BATS), for example, pays a 9.75% dividend currently and is part of my own high-yield portfolio.

Just £471 invested monthly in this stock could produce a £97,129 investment pot after 10 years. This would pay £8,744 a year in dividends, or £729 a month!

This is on two provisos. First, the yield averaged the same (it could be less, or more, as dividend payouts and share prices change).

And second, the dividends paid out are reinvested back into the stock – known as ‘dividend compounding’. This is the same process as leaving interest paid in a bank account to grow over time.

On the same two provisos, this £471 a month over 30 years could grow into £1,026,427. This would pay £94,742 in dividend yield a year, or £7,895 a month!

How to choose the stocks
In my case, three factors are key in stock selection.

First, it needs a yield of at least 7% — but the higher the better, provided the stock quality remains good.

Second, its shares should appear to me to be undervalued against their peers, using various financial measurements. British American Tobacco, for instance, is currently trading on the key price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio at just 6.1. This compares to a peer group average of 7.8, so it looks undervalued to me.

Additionally, a discounted cash flow analysis shows the stock to be around 55% undervalued at its present price of £23.70. Therefore, a fair value would be around £52.67, but this does not necessarily mean it will ever reach that level.
The third key factor in my stock selection is how the core business looks. In British American Tobacco’s case, it is transitioning away from tobacco products and towards non-combustible nicotine products, such as vapes.

So far, this appears to be going well. Its 2023 results showed adjusted profit from operations rose 3.1% in 2023 from 2022 – to £12.47bn. Analysts’ expectations are that its earnings and EPS will rise respectively by 71% and 65.1% a year to end-2026.

There are risks for me to monitor, of course. One is that its business transition is delayed for some reason. Another is any litigation from the effects of its products in the past.

This said, over time everyone will develop their own methodology for choosing stocks that are right for their investment portfolio.

Ultimately, though, good choices, regular investment and dividend compounding are all that are required to make significant passive income over time, in my experience.

XD dates

Thursday 28 March

BlackRock Energy & Resources Inc Trust PLC ex-dividend payment date
BlackRock Sustainable American Income Trust PLC ex-dividend payment date
Value & Indexed Property Income Trust PLC ex-dividend payment date

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