Investment Trust Dividends

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How much passive income can an investor make from the stock market?

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Story by Ben McPoland

It’s never been easier to generate passive income from the stock market.

So, how much passive income could an investor starting out realistically expect to generate from a portfolio? Let’s find out. It’s never been easier to generate passive income from the stock market. There are dozens of trading apps about nowadays, many of them offering a wide range of investing choices. Better still, some don’t charge any stock trading fees.

So, how much passive income could an investor starting out realistically expect to generate from a portfolio ? Let’s find out.


A £10k portfolio
The first thing to point out is that a Stocks and Shares ISA account shields any dividends received from income tax. While the annual limit is £20,000, even investing half that amount is enough to build up sizeable passive income, as we’ll see.

Please note that tax treatment depends on the individual circumstances of each client and may be subject to change in future. The content in this article is provided for information purposes only. It is not intended to be, neither does it constitute, any form of tax advice. Readers are responsible for carrying out their own due diligence and for obtaining professional advice before making any investment decisions.

The average dividend yield from FTSE 100 stocks right now is around 3.5%. This means an investor could invest £10,000 in an index tracker than holds all 100 stocks and hope to achieve annual dividend income of £350.


An alternative route would be to build a bespoke portfolio of individual shares. This approach carries higher potential risk, as individual companies face unique challenges that require consideration, and their dividends are not guaranteed.

However, the risk might be worth it due to the potential for higher income. In other words, it is possible to earn a far higher rate of passive income by investing in individual dividend stocks offering far higher yields.

A stock to consider
I currently have four ultra-high-yield FTSE 100 stocks in my income portfolio. The table below lists their forecast dividend yields for 2025.

The average yield here is 7.7%, meaning an investor who puts £2,500 into each stock should receive £770 a year in dividends. That’s more than double the FTSE 100 average!


Of course, I’m simplifying things, as dividend payments rarely stay the same every year. Ideally, they should increase, but that isn’t certain. Aviva, for example, cut its payout in 2019 (though it’s paid a rising dividend every year since).

Global bank HSBC and insurers Legal & General and Aviva are all financial stocks. Therefore, the other may stick out like a sore thumb. Why do I own the tobacco stock? Well, when I first invested in it back in March, the stock was yielding above 10% on a forward-looking basis. That proved far too tempting, despite the genuine risk of falling cigarette sales.

Since then though, the share price has increased by 33%, lowering the yield in the process. Nevertheless, l think the stock still offers me solid value, trading at a low price-to-earnings multiple of around 7.9.

British American Tobacco is the world’s second-largest tobacco company by volume, operating in more than 180 countries. It owns cigarette labels Lucky Strike and Camel, as well as next-generation brands like Vuse (e-cigarettes), Glo (heated tobacco), and Velo (nicotine pouches). I don’t expect these nicotine products to disappear worldwide for some time.

Indeed, the Trump administration recently withdrew a plan to ban menthol cigarettes in the US. The company owns Newport, the leading menthol brand in America. Meanwhile, its Velo-branded nicotine pouch products are growing strongly.

Regular investing
To build up sizeable passive income, it’s going to take time. However, if someone invested £500 a month on top of a £10k sum, and reinvested dividends along the way, they’d end up with £319,077 after 20 years.

That portfolio would then be generating £24,568 in dividends each year, assuming the same 7.7% yield.

The post How much passive income can an investor make from the stock market ? appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.

£££££££££££££££££

Using the the figure of £319k, dividends income of £24,568 could be twice the amount if using the 4% rule.

Whilst neither figure is guaranteed at least with a dividend re-investment plan you have an end destination to work too.

Investment trust bargains ?

Investment trust bargains: how to find them and where to look in 2025

We explain the tricks of the trade for finding potential discount opportunities, and name investment trusts where analysts think there will be plenty of value in 2025.

29th January 2025 09:22

by Kyle Caldwell from interactive investor

discount value 600

There are various ways to improve the odds of investment success, including having a diversified portfolio, investing over the long term, and rebalancing a couple of times a year.

Another one is to keep a close eye on valuations and seek out undervalued areas of the market. This approach is not for the faint-hearted, as it carries the risk of catching the proverbial falling knife. However, for those prepared to stomach the risk, buying on the cheap can potentially pay off over the long term.

Investment trusts, due to their structure, offer investors the opportunity to go shopping in the sales. At the end of 2024, the average investment trust discount stood at around 15%.

Investment trusts have two values: the amount the trust itself is worth (the net asset value or NAV), and its share price. When the share price is lower than the NAV per share, the trust trades at a “discount”. When the share price rises above NAV, it is trading at a “premium”, as you are paying more than the assets are worth.

In this article, we highlight areas of the market and specific trusts where analysts and professional investors are finding value on a discount basis.

But first, we run through some considerations when sizing up discounts.

Always good to pay less, but performance is the biggest driver of returns

While investment trust discounts are an opportunity to buy a basket of investments for less than the sum of their parts, over the long term it is the performance of those underlying investments that has the biggest influence on the overall total shareholder returns. Put simply, if the trust doesn’t perform well, it is likely to consistently have a high discount due to a lack of demand for the shares.

Another important thing to bear in mind with investment trust discounts is that they typically have a greater tendency to converge to their mean discount rather than the value of their underlying investments.

Therefore, it is useful to consider the current discount versus history, and take a view over one, three and five years, for example. It is also worth comparing an investment trust discount with its wider sector.

Bear in mind that some trusts consistently sit in a tight discount range, meaning it is not a “true” bargain, and the discount is merely “normal”.

Also be aware that when it comes to investment trust premiums, it is not usually worth paying over the odds. This is because high premiums do not tend to be sustainable over the long term. When conditions change, such as when investors become more cautious, premiums can fall and turn into a discount. When this happens, shareholder returns are negatively impacted. 

Investment trust discounts: how to size up potential bargains

It is important to remember that there will be a reason why a trust is trading on a discount. This could be related to poor investor sentiment towards the region it invests in, or the trust’s investment style being out of favour, or lacklustre short- or long-term performance. Indeed, it could be all those reasons.

As with any investment trading on a cheap valuation, it’s important to avoid being seduced solely by the discount. Instead, consider the prospects for the investment trust going forwards. If those prospects look bleak, then the discount could widen further, so now may not be a good time to buy.

It is a case of taking a view on whether the prospects for the trust will improve, which could then lower the discount.

Timescale is important. Those investing for the long term – five years or longer – will be buying today in the hope that the discount will, over time, reduce towards the value of the underlying investments held in the trust – the NAV.

For such investors it is less of a concern if the discount widens further in the short term, providing that it reduces over a longer period. However, those with shorter timescales who are looking to make a quick buck from a wide discount narrowing will likely be more irritated if the trust gets even cheaper.

In short, discounts can work in investors’ favour, but it is important to think long term and to be patient. If you buy at the right time, resulting in a high discount falling to a low one, or even moving to a premium, the share price return will be boosted.

Investment trust discounts have been at historically wide levels for three years. As a result, discounts have attracted the attention of US activist investor Saba Capital, which holds stakes in 25 investment trusts, according to the analyst Numis.

Saba is attempting to oust the boards of a number of investment trusts and replace them with two directors that it has chosen. Its proposals are being put to a shareholder vote, which will take place in the coming weeks for six of the trusts. One of the trusts, Herald, has already held its vote, with shareholders voting against Saba.

Other tricks of the trade

In some cases, large discounts can be a more permanent feature for trusts due to a lack of investor appetite for shares and a lack of share buybacks from the board.

Trusts with a low profile, or those that invest in a specialist area of the market, can also persistently trade at discounts to NAV. Such trusts tend to fly under the radar of many investors. With demand low, these trusts tend to persistently trade on a discount.

One way to gauge whether an investment trust board is willing to tackle its discount is share buybacks. By reducing the number of shares in circulation, there’s less of an imbalance between supply and demand. In theory, this will reduce the trust’s discount, benefiting its shareholders as the share price will receive a boost as it narrows towards the value of the trust’s underlying investments.

However, share buybacks are no panacea. Buybacks won’t prevent discounts widening if there’s no demand for the shares. Much more important over the long term is the performance of the underlying investments held by the investment trust.

Also be mindful of the fact that some trusts have discount control mechanisms. This is where boards promise to purchase their own shares if the discount exceeds a certain level, such as 10%, in normal market conditions. This can be beneficial for investors as, in theory, the discount will be contained.

Investor reading on a tablet

Investment trust bargains at the start of 2025  

According to Investment Week, the trade publication, around 91% of investment trusts – or 332 out of 365 – ended 2024 trading on a discount.

Therefore, there are plenty of opportunities for investment trust fans.

Analysts highlight three areas in particular: UK smaller companies, renewable energy infrastructure and private equity. 

All three areas have been out of favour amid a rising interest rate environment. As UK smaller companies are more volatile than larger companies, this area of the market suffers when investors become more cautious and reduce risk, which played out as interest rates rose.  

Moreover, as this part of the market houses companies that are more domestically focused, it has been suffering from poor investor sentiment towards the UK economy.

A potential catalyst for reviving the fortunes of this part of the market could be further declines in interest rates, which are expected in 2025. Lower interest rates could mean investors become less cautious and size up higher-risk areas of the market.

Moreover, investors may reappraise large caps in light of relatively high valuations and weaker fundamentals, diverting capital back into small-cap areas, which have cheaper price tags.

The investment trust structure can work in the favour of smaller-company strategies. This is because a fixed amount of shares are issued under the investment trust structure. As a result, smaller-company trusts are not exposed to the potential liquidity risk facing funds. With funds, managers can, at times, be forced to reduce or sell holdings to meet investor redemptions.

Winterflood, the analyst, highlighted Fidelity Special Values Ord 

FSV

Trading on a discount of -8.9% (as of 24 January). Managed by contrarian investor Alex Wright, it invests across the UK equity market but has a bias towards smaller companies.

“Alex Wright’s stewardship of Fidelity Special Values since 2012 has been impressive, reinvigorating the fund’s rationale as an investor in special situations.

“Wright has the benefit of extensive knowledge of the UK small-cap market and is supported by Fidelity’s well-resourced research team. Wright’s contrarian value approach, with a focus on the potential for positive change, offers an attractive proposition, with downside risks reduced by the already relatively low UK valuations. 

“The fund has traded at a premium to the peer group for most of the last five years and the board’s commitment to ‘maintain the discount in single digits in normal market conditions’ limits the downside discount risk.”

Winterflood also picked out JPMorgan UK Small Cap Growth & Income 

JUGI

. Its discount is -10.9%. Manager Georgina Brittain looks for attractively valued, high-quality companies that have positive momentum.

Winterflood said: “In our opinion, the current discount of -10% offers an attractive entry point, having widened substantially from its tightest level of 2% in mid-August. We see scope for the rating to narrow if sentiment towards UK small caps turns more positive, as we saw for brief periods during 2024.

“If this does come to pass, which could be triggered by a variety of macro factors, we would argue that JPMorgan UK Small Cap Growth & Income is one of the best available methods to take advantage, by virtue of its performance and prevailing pricing.”

Henderson Smaller Companies Ord 

HSL

Another of interactive investor’s Super 60 investment ideas,is also trading on a discount, of -13.3%. It is managed by experienced stock picker Neil Hermon. The investment approach is focused on identifying quality-growth companies and holding them over the long term.

The other area where analysts are finding plenty of value opportunities is the renewable energy sector. Such trusts have been out of favour with investors due to the higher level of income investors can obtain through lower-risk assets, with cash and government bonds with short lifespans offering yields of around 5%. Such a backdrop reduces the appeal of trying to obtain higher yields for a higher amount of risk.

However, now that the interest-rate cycle has potentially peaked, this sector could see a significant shift in sentiment if investors are tempted by the big discounts on offer as bond yields fall in value after rates are cut.

In addition, the yields are very high, with the sector average yield standing at 9.8%.

As noted in a recent feature, James Carthew,head of investment company research at QuotedData, points out that investors could pick almost any trust in the renewable energy sector and receive a very high, growing dividend (although of course not guaranteed). 

It is also an area that James Calder, chief investment officer at City Asset Management, is looking at. Calder says that the revenue streams from this sector are government-backed and long term, adding: “They have gone out of favour and the share prices have dropped, but they are still generating the same strong cash flows. That means the level of yield has got higher and higher.

High yielding fund ideas for income seekers in 2025 

Greencoat UK Wind 

UKW

 Is popular with interactive investor customers, consistently appearing in our monthly top 10 most-bought investment trust rankings. Its income stream is linked to inflation, meaning that investors should see their dividend growth match rising prices in the economy. Its discount stands at -24.4%, and the dividend yield is 8.3%.

A third area for potential discount opportunities is private equity. It has also been an out-of-favour area over the past couple of years. Investors headed for the door after being spooked by a combination of rising interest rates, fears over valuations and a general “risk-off” mood in markets. 

Numis makes the case for a turnaround: “We believe the outlook is positive for share price returns from listed private equity investment companies, fuelled by a combination of a continuation of strong NAV return track records and the potential for narrowing of discount.

“In the long term, we expect NAVs to be driven by the strong earnings growth from portfolio companies, fuelled by managers adding value through active ownership of companies, delivering operational change and having the flexibility to adapt to a changing environment. A more stable, or declining, interest-rate environment would also be supportive.”

Numis highlights the wide discounts of Oakley Capital Investments Ord 

OCI

 HarbourVest Global Priv Equity Ord 

HVPE

Pantheon International Ord PIN0.47%. The respective discounts are: -28.5%, -38.1% and -36.6%.

These articles are provided for information purposes only.  Occasionally, an opinion about whether to buy or sell a specific investment may be provided by third parties.  The content is not intended to be a personal recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument or product, or to adopt any investment strategy as it is not provided based on an assessment of your investing knowledge and experience, your financial situation or your investment objectives. The value of your investments, and the income derived from them, may go down as well as up. You may not get back all the money that you invest. The investments referred to in this article may not be suitable for all investors, and if in doubt, an investor should seek advice from a qualified investment adviser.

ii Interactive Investor

MVI

Marwyn Value Investors Limited

(the “Company”)

INTERIM DIVIDEND TO ORDINARY SHAREHOLDERS

The Company is pleased to announce that an interim dividend of 2.265p per Ordinary Share will be paid on 28 February 2025, pursuant to the Company’s ordinary share distribution policy.

Timetable for February Interim Dividend

Ex-date6 February 2025
Record date7 February 2025
Payment of the interim dividend28 February 2025

Early retirement ?

Here’s how an investor could find shares to buy for an early retirement.

Story by Christopher Ruane

Buying shares and letting dividends or capital gains pile up can be a lucrative way to get ready to retire early. But that plan requires an investor to decide what shares to buy.

Here is one approach an investor could consider.

Starting with the end in mind

To boost the value of the portfolio in the decades leading up to retirement, so that it can produce an income through dividends, an investor could choose growth shares, income shares, or a combination of both.

But that timeframe could also allow the power of compounding to demonstrate itself. For example, compounding a portfolio of income shares at an annual rate of 7% would mean it should grow by 661% in total over a period of 30 years.

On the hunt for long-term value compounders

In that context, it could make sense for an investor to buy either growth or income shares along the way. Either could compound in value over time.

But I think a key point to ask is: what does the future look like?

In other words, investing for decades ahead is not necessarily the same as when someone with a short-term mindset looks for shares to buy.

So it can be helpful to think about what industries could be thriving decades down the road.

Still, in any large or potentially large industry, how could an investor decide from the different shares available what ones to buy?

Why a proven business model can aid investment decisions

One approach is to look for businesses that have a proven commercial model.

That could mean ruling out some real disruptors that go on to be massive successes. But it could hopefully also mean avoiding lots of early-stage companies whose number one skill is burning through cash.

A proven business model not only suggests that a firm has what it takes to make money. It can also suggest that a company is being run by real business managers, not people who confuse having a great idea with having a great business.

MotleyFool

UK dividends in 2025 ?

What is the outlook for UK dividends in 2025?

Dividends from UK equities are expected to display limited growth this year, and in fact – given the precarious state of the UK economy – might underperform the yields that investors could realise from bonds.

“Over 2025 we predict equities to yield 3.8%,” says Cleland. “The top 100 is likely to yield 3.8% and the mid-caps 3.5%.”

These yields are below the returns that 10-year gilts are yielding, which increased to over 4.6% in recent weeks. Gilts are generally regarded as a safer investment than equities, and in the current climate they are also offering higher yields.

“This means UK gilts are offering a significantly better income than shares at present for a lower risk (if they are held to maturity),” says Cleland.

Computershare’s analysis predicts “dividends in 2025 to reach £92.7bn at the headline level: up just 0.7% year-on-year”.

How have share buybacks impacted UK dividends?

Dividends aren’t the only means by which companies return capital to shareholders. They also do so via share buybacks, and UK companies have ramped these up over the last year.

Computershare estimates the size of UK share buybacks in 2024 at £42-45 billion; “less than the record achieved in 2022 when companies returned cash preserved during the pandemic-inspired dividend cuts but well above the pre-2020 annual average”, says Cleland.

Buying back shares reduces the number in circulation, so increases the value of those that remain. However, it also makes less money available for dividend payments, and Cleland argues that this has been another contributing factor to the decline in dividend payments.

“The trend for companies to buy back their shares with excess cash at the expense of special dividends continues,” says Smith, while adding that “underlying dividend growth next year should be supported by international earners and banks, while dividend cover for the UK market in aggregate is healthy.”

Money Week

UKW

GREENCOAT UK WIND PLC 

(the “Company”)

Q4 Update, Net Asset Value, Dividend and Asset Divestments

Net Asset Value and Dividend Announcement

Net Asset Value / Net Asset Value per share£3,409 million / 151.2 pence
Dividend per share2.5 pence

The Company announces that its unaudited Net Asset Value as of 31 December 2024 is £3,409 million (151.2 pence per share), a decrease of 7.4 pence per share from NAV at 30 September 2024.

The Company declares a quarterly interim dividend of 2.5 pence per share with respect to the quarter ended 31 December 2024, taking the total FY 2024 dividend to 10 pence per share. The Company also announces an increase in the target dividend for 2025 to 10.35 pence per share in line with the Retail Prices Index for December 2024 of 3.5 per cent.

Dividend Timetable

Ex-dividend date           13 February 2025

Record date                  14 February 2025

Payment date                28 February 2025

Energy Yield Review

The movement in NAV was primarily the result of a revision to energy yield estimates across the Company’s portfolio. The Board and the Investment Manager periodically review the portfolio’s energy yield estimates (P50), and decided to harmonise the data set used in long term wind speed correlation in conjunction with an expert third party. This has also added a number of recent years to the correlation data with lower than long term average UK wind speeds and this serves to bring the long term average down.

As a result, the long term generation forecast is expected to be 2.4% lower, with a resulting NAV decrease of 6.5 pence per share.

Since IPO, the Company has delivered 1.8x dividend cover and, with its revised generating budget, remains on course to generate (on average) dividend cover of 1.9x over the next 5 years.  This would deliver over £1 billion in excess cashflow over the next 5 years for allocation to the advantage of its shareholders.

abrdn Equity Income

Strong stock selection and a pickup in M&A activity has driven AEI’s outperformance over 12 months…

Kepler

Overview

Thomas Moore, manager of abrdn Equity Income (AEI), employs an index-agnostic approach to investing in UK equities, aiming to deliver above-average and growing income to investors, alongside capital growth. His strategy centres on stock selection, targeting companies based on their individual merits and alignment with the trust’s objectives, rather than their weighting in an index. This flexible approach enables him to uncover value across the market, including opportunities in areas often overlooked by traditional equity income strategies.

Over the past year, Thomas has capitalised on market volatility by making a number of adjustments to the Portfolio on valuation grounds. This included investing in well-established, high-yielding large-cap names such as M&G and Imperial Brands, whilst also identifying compelling prospects in the small- and mid-cap space, adding Petershill and Galliford Try, which offer attractive yields and greater growth potential, to the portfolio.

Focussing on higher-yielding companies has allowed Thomas to maintain AEI’s competitive yield of 7.0%. This is a significant premium to the market and the second highest in the AIC UK equity income sector. In addition to yield, Thomas screens for companies with dividend growth potential, helping the trust maintain its consistent dividend growth record, despite difficult economic conditions, with 2024 marking the 24th consecutive year of dividend increases.

The market backdrop has not been supportive to the investment process – given the outperformance of larger-cap growth stocks – resulting in the trust underperforming its benchmark over a five-year period. However, the trust has seen a marked improvement in Performance over the past 12 months, delivering NAV total returns of 24.3%, outpacing the FTSE All-Share Index’s return of 17.6%. Outperformance stemmed from strong stock selection and heightened M&A activity. Defensive mega-cap names like Imperial Brands, which continues to thrive under new management, and financial holdings such as NatWest, Barclays, and HSBC, which benefitted from the ‘higher for longer’ interest rate environment, were key contributors to returns.

Analyst’s View

We think the UK market, despite recent challenges, presents an intriguing opportunity for investors, given the current divergence in equity valuations. The UK plays host to a range of well-established, operationally strong and attractively valued companies. The key is identifying undervalued opportunities with genuine upside potential.

Thomas brings years of UK market experience, with expertise in spotting valuation mispricings. His index-agnostic approach allows him to explore the entire market, beyond traditional equity income constraints, for attractively valued companies with latent recovery potential. AEI has faced headwinds over the past five years, as Thomas’s focus on smaller companies and more value-oriented stocks, which have been largely out of favour, led to underperformance versus the benchmark., AEI’s Performance has rebounded more recently, outperforming its benchmark as market conditions have turned more favourable for Thomas’s strategy. Easing UK-specific headwinds have triggered portfolio re-ratings, whilst historically low valuations for smaller companies – in cases due to prolonged economic pressures rather than weak fundamentals – have driven heightened M&A activity. Several smaller portfolio holdings have been sold at large premiums following private bids.

With a 7.0% yield, a premium to the market, and a 24-year track record of consistent dividend growth, we think AEI offers a compelling proposition for income-focussed investors seeking differentiated exposure to the UK. As interest rates fall and the appeal of high-yielding bonds and bank accounts diminishes, AEI could be a well-positioned destination for investors seeking higher-yielding opportunities with potential for capital growth.

Bull

  • Offers one of the highest yields in the sector, supported by strong reserves
  • Differentiated portfolio including a bias to UK small- and mid-caps
  • Trust has recently reduced its charges

Bear

  • Exposure to small and medium-sized companies may bring more sensitivity to the UK economy
  • Use of gearing could magnify the gains but also the losses
  • Value-tilted portfolio has seen the trust struggle when growth style outperforms

BSIF dividend


Bluefield Solar Income Fund Limited

(‘Bluefield Solar’ or the ‘Company’)

First Interim Dividend Announcement

Bluefield Solar (LON: BSIF), the London listed UK income fund focused primarily on acquiring and managing solar energy assets, is pleased to announce the Company’s first interim dividend for the financial year ending 30 June 2025 (the ‘First Interim Dividend’).

The First Interim Dividend of 2.20 pence per Ordinary Share (January 2024: 2.20 pence per Ordinary Share) will be payable to Shareholders on the register as at 7 February 2025, with an associated ex-dividend date of 6 February 2025 and a payment date on or around 7 March 2025.

The Board is pleased to reaffirm its guidance of a full year dividend of not less than 8.90 pence per Ordinary Share for the financial year ending 30 June 2025 (2024: 8.80 pence). This is expected to be covered by earnings post debt amortisation.

This week’s XD dates

Thursday 30 January

CC Japan Income & Growth Trust PLC ex-dividend date
CQS Natural Resources Growth & Income PLC ex-dividend date
Edinburgh Investment Trust PLC ex-dividend date
Henderson Far East Income Ltd ex-dividend date
JPMorgan Claverhouse Investment Trust PLC ex-dividend date
M&G Credit Income Investment Trust PLC ex-dividend date
Residential Secure Income PLC ex-dividend date
Schroder Oriental Income Fund Ltd ex-dividend date
Schroder UK Mid Cap Fund PLC ex-dividend date
Sequoia Economic Infrastructure Income Fund Ltd ex-dividend date
Supermarket Income REIT PLC ex-dividend date

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