Investment Trust Dividends

Category: Uncategorized (Page 182 of 304)

Snowball rules

There is a new rule.

Rule one.

Buy Investment Trusts that pay a ‘secure’ dividend to buy more Investment Trusts that pay a ‘secure’ dividend.

Rule two.

Any Trust that drasitically changes it dividend policy must be sold even at a loss.

Rule three.

Obey rule one and two.

Passive Income

1 top stock to consider for a diversified passive income portfolio

Story by Kevin Godbold

The Motley Fool

Income from passive investing sounds attractive.

Little effort. No worries. Just sitting back and waiting for shareholder dividends to flood in.

That’s one way of investing. But it’s active rather than passive

Checking in every so often

For those with a life, a better way may be to take the laid-back approach.

After all, billionaire investor Warren Buffett is known for holding stocks for long periods — think decades. So he’s proved there are businesses that can be buy-and-forget investments.

Having said that, Buffett is known for reading company annual reports. But I bet he doesn’t watch stock price movements, or concern himself with every piece of trifling news. Has he even got his own computer ? I’m not sure.

Reading annual reports — or even just skimming them — is a good idea. If we don’t do that, what’s the point of being a do-it-yourself investor? We might as well just bung money in low-cost index tracker funds and ride off into the sunset.

However, a light-touch approach to owning shares can be productive because a long-term holding period often drives the best returns. Being too active can lead to doing silly things, such as buying and selling shares too much because of emotional over-reactions to news flow.

But passive investing needs a couple of things, I reckon.

Two important steps to take

The first is a careful approach to stock selection, and thorough initial research. The second is diversification between several stocks, so all the invested money isn’t concentrated too much.

With a diversified long-term portfolio in mind, I’d consider stocks such as Renewables Infrastructure (LSE: TRIG).

The investment firm has a portfolio of onshore & offshore wind, solar, and battery storage projects across the UK, Ireland, France, Germany, Spain, and Sweden. 

In short, green energy, so why has the share price been so weak lately? In today’s world, the sector seems like a no-brainer for investment, at least at first glance.

Those risks are real and may become an ongoing headwind for the company’s growth in net asset value and cash flow. Many stocks in the sector have been marked lower by the market over the past few months.

A strong record

However, if Renewables Infrastructure can keep up decent cash flow, there’s a good chance dividend payments will continue. After all, the multi-year record of shareholder payments is excellent.

The firm has raised the dividend every year since at least 2018, and didn’t even miss a beat through the pandemic.

With the share price near 100p, the forward-looking yield for 2025 is just over a whopping 7.6%.

Over the long haul, I reckon the company has a bright future, so I’d be keen to research further with a view to adding some of the shares to a diversified portfolio of stocks

GSF

Gore Street Energy Storage Fund plc

Dividend Policy

We remain committed to regular capital allocation reviews and comprehensive analytical assessments, while remaining receptive to shareholder feedback, to ensure the Company continues to be managed effectively for investors. Following this year’s review, the Board has decided to adjust the Company’s dividend policy to better align it with the construction schedule of the portfolio.

It is the Directors’ intention to continue to pay, in the absence of unforeseen circumstances, a dividend of 7.0 pence per ordinary share for the financial year subject to market conditions and performance, financial position and outlook, and fiscal environment. This is consistent with investors’ expectations based on the current NAV but, from the 2024/25 financial year, the profile and quantum of dividend distributions will be more closely aligned with operational and other cashflows rather than NAV.

Moving from roughly equal payments across all quarters, the Board has determined to target a dividend of 1.0 pence per Ordinary Share for each of the first three quarters of the financial year. It is intended the amount of the final quarterly dividend (announced in June and paid in July) will make up the balance of the annual dividend target subject to cash flows at the time. As with the current dividend policy, all dividends remain at the discretion of the Board.

This is a prudent adjustment to the dividend policy reflecting the maturing nature of the Company’s portfolio, with a transformative year for increasing operational and revenue-generating capacity.

Trendy Trusts

Might the UK market be at a turning point?

While the French find themselves in uncharted water as no party wins its general election, the UK looks to be in much better shape. M&A activity is picking up, Labour is looking to boost growth and international investors might find UK equities look cheap and under owned.

By David Stevenson•11 Jul, 2024•

Like many I didn’t bother staying up past 11pm on Thursday night to see the election result, partly because I’ve done so many times before, and partly because the end result (a Labour government) wasn’t ever in much doubt. The next morning, I anticipated a long series of emails from investment managers making all sorts of claims about ‘what next for investors…’ – and was richly rewarded with observations, comments and the odd outlandish criticism. 

Stepping back from the noise of the election campaign, I think we can safely make a few observations. The first, is that no one in the City was sitting in cold sweat anticipating a hard left Labour government. The charm offensive by Rachel Reeves et al was just too high profile for the scare stories about a socialist revolution to make much headway. In fact, the next morning, sterling slightly strengthened, and gilts were also in the black. As for the stockmarket, by early afternoon on Friday – enough time for the result to sink in – the FTSE 100 had barely ticked up, while the more domestically focused FTSE 250 was up 1.39%. British home builders stood out, with an index tracking their shares up 2.3%. As for gilts, Reuters reported the premium that investors demand for the extra risk of holding gilts rather than top-rated German 10-year bonds has remained stable this year at around 160 basis points – far below the 230 basis points seen during a mini-budget crisis in 2022. That premium was down 2 basis points at 159 basis points on Friday.

The next observation I’d make is that the big majority for Labour should make the government fairly stable and what many investors crave above everything else is stability. 

I’d make two final observations. The first is that the UK market is under-owned by international investors and what will really make a difference to UK stocks – and funds – is whether the UK seems a more attractive, cheap way to buy exposure to the right business sectors. To understand this point consider these two facts :

  • The UK market comprises just 3.4% of the value of the Global ACWI index, compared to 5.1% for Japan. Back in 2011, that number was 7.5%, and even as recently as 2021, it was 4.9%. Japanese equities currently comprise 5.1% of the ACWI global index.
  • UK stocks comprise just 3.72% of the MSCI World index (which excludes emerging market stocks). Again, this percentage was much higher in previous decades.

For the UK market to really increase in value, we need more international investors to think the UK market is cheap. 

This brings me nicely to the final point: one crucial element in that equation – is the UK cheap and a great place to access the right sectors? – are closed-end funds and investment trusts. I sense that more and more international investors are beginning to focus on the FTSE 250 index, a more useful proxy for the UK, and that means investment trusts are crucial. 

Of the 250 companies in the FTSE 250, over 90 are investment trusts or REITs. In addition, 12 other companies in the FTSE2 50 are asset managers and custodians, many of which have significant investment trust exposure. Collectively, if we add up all the funds and trusts, we come to a total value of £125 billion compared to the total FTSE 250 value of £2.5 trillion. If we include 3i in that fund calculation, then we come to £155 billion. The average FTSE 250 stock has risen by 12.6% in price terms over the last 12 months whereas the average fund in the FTSE 250 index has risen by just over 10%. 

To put it as bluntly as we can, the difficulties faced by the investment trust sector – big discounts, patchy liquidity, lots of selling – have a major impact on the FTSE 250 index, which many international investors see as the better proxy for the UK economy. If the UK market is to enjoy a renaissance – and I’m more positive than most – then a large part of that resurgence will depend on international investors buying into investment trusts. 

I’ll finish with one positive data point – takeover activity. Charles Hall is head of research at broker, Peel Hunt, which has very publicly warned that the UK market – funds and operating companies – is in danger of falling into a death spiral because of a lack of interest in the UK and negative government policies. As an investment advisory firm, they have been admirably blunt about the headwinds, so when they come out with some positive news, it’s worth taking note. Hall recently circulated a research note stating that the pace of takeover activity for UK companies generally, and specifically smaller market cap companies, is increasing. Here are some choice quotes from the report:

  • M&A activity on the up – Bids announced YTD and still live amount to an equity value of £43bn. Including the bids announced last year and completed this year, and delistings from the UK, the total value is £95bn.
  • Going up the market cap – Of the 32 transactions announced in H1, 17 were in the FTSE 350, 3 in the FTSE Smallcap and 10 on AIM. In the whole of FY23, there were 39 transactions announced, of which 2 were in the FTSE 350, 14 in the FTSE Smallcap and 19 on AIM.
  • Increase in pace – There has been an acceleration in both the number and scale of transactions over the last few quarters, with Q2 being the busiest period both by number (21) and value (£26.5bn).
  • More corporate buyers – Last year, the majority (56%) of offers were from financial buyers. However, corporate buyers (72%) have dominated in 2024 as the rate environment and economic outlook have become clearer, demonstrating the value of UK companies.
  • Multiple offers – There have been 6 competitive situations YTD (Alpha, C&R, DS Smith, Hipgnosis, Spirent and Wincanton) and 8 raised offers.
  • High premiums – The average premium thus far in FY24 is 40%, with some offers materially higher than the undisturbed price (e.g., Wincanton +104%, Spirent +86%, IDS +73% and Keywords Studios +69%).
  • Overseas appetite – Overseas bidders are c.60% of the total YTD.
  • Sector focus – Tech and Real Estate have been the most active sectors.

Those last two bullet points are very relevant for investors in investment trusts: there is increasing appetite from international investors and real estate investment trusts are a particular focus. These trends are potentially very positive for investment trusts. I’d also note one other potential positive – more and more smaller cap companies on the London market are being snapped up by trade buyers. This bodes well for a large number of funds that are focused on the UK small to mid-cap sector.

££££££££££££

Until news, the trend is your friend.

Follow the money

Are investment company insiders calling the bottom for one sector?

Of the 14 transactions that made it onto broker Liberum’s list of investment company insider buys for May, half were for funds that came from the same sector. What might we be able to learn from them?

By Frank Buhagiar

Are investment company insiders calling the bottom for one sector?
Of the 14 transactions that made it onto broker Liberum’s list of investment company insider buys for May, half were for funds that came from the same sector. What might we be able to learn from them ?

By
Frank Buhagiar

News of insiders snapping up shares in their own funds can serve as a useful (and comforting) measure of the confidence that the individuals concerned have in a fund’s prospects and the value of the underlying portfolio. For insiders, read directors and management / advisory teams of the investment companies . Arguably, when insiders buy shares in the companies they manage or oversee, a more powerful message is sent to the market compared to a paragraph or two in a results statement from the Chair.

Liberum regularly follows insider share purchase announcements released by London’s investment companies. The broker compiles and publishes a list of insider buys of over £10,000 that have taken place over the course of each calendar month. Sometimes, the list includes funds from a diverse range of sectors. Other times, the list can contain several funds that herald from the same sector, so many that there’s enough of a hint of a pattern to prompt further investigation. And that’s precisely what happened with Liberum’s list of insider buys for the month of May (see below). As can be seen, one sector stands out:

Out of the 14 funds in the table, half come from the property sector, an area of the market that has been among the hardest hit these past few years. Interest rates at multi-decade highs and an uncertain macroeconomic environment have both weighed heavily on sentiment, leading to concerns over valuations, share price weakness and hefty discounts to net assets.

But with directors and investment managers acquiring shares in seven different property companies during May, perhaps the insiders are collectively sending out a message that a bottom in the cycle is in sight. Certainly, based on the M&A activity seen in the sector in recent months as well as the Special Opportunities REIT IPO (even though it was eventually pulled in June), a case can be made that trade buyers, if not investors, are calling the bottom. So, do the actions of the insiders point to the same conclusion? A host of insiders taking advantage of discounts to buy shares would suggest they too are seeing light at the end of the tunnel. But is all as it seems?

Not all insider buys are equal

Some share acquisitions are linked to investment manager remuneration. That was the case with Primary Health Properties’ (PHP) 886,824 insider buy of 9 May 2024. According to the company’s announcement, these were awarded as nil-cost options under PHP’s 2021 Long-term Incentive Plan to a Person Discharging Managerial Responsibilities (PDMR). That person is CEO, Mark Davies. While the award does show that Mr Davies has skin in the game, it’s not quite the same as an insider dipping into their own pockets to acquire shares in their fund.

Tritax EuroBox’s (BOXE) 118,832 insider purchase relates to an issue of equity that falls under the fund’s investment management fee arrangements. As announced on 16 May 2024, BOXE acquired the shares in the market ‘in accordance with the terms of the Investment Management Agreement between the Company and Tritax Management LLP dated 14 June 2018 (as amended), pursuant to which 10 per cent. of the management fee (net of any applicable tax) shall be applied to subscribing for or acquiring ordinary shares of the Company.’ Investment managers being issued with equity in lieu of fees not to be scoffed at but, as with PHP, not wholly relevant to this exercise which is looking to identify insiders taking advantage of discounts on offer.

On 22 May 2024, the property development and investment group Conygar Investments (CIC) announced that Non-executive Chairman, Nigel Hamway, and CEO, Robert Ware, purchased 20,000 and 29,050 ordinary shares respectively at 79.7p per share. The day before, CIC announced that Mr Ware had acquired 10,000 shares at 80p a share on 17 May 2024. The latest purchases bring Mr Hamway’s holding up to 1,276,700 ordinary shares or 2.14% of the issued share capital of the company and Mr Ware’s up to 4,856,050 or 8.14% of the company.

In CIC’s latest interims that were published on 16 May 2024, net asset value per share stood at 153p as at 31 March 2024. Those insider buys executed at a near 50% discount to net assets. Looks like we have our first bargain hunters. It’s a similar story with abrdn Property Income (API). The Board recently secured shareholder approval to wind the company down but, on 15 May 2024, Non-executive Director, Mike Balfour, purchased 125,000 shares at 52.57p a pop. 31 May 2024 fellow Director, Michael Bane, bought 66,700 shares at 53p a share. At the time the shares were trading at a 30% discount to net assets, a level they currently trade at today. Another one for the insider bargain-buy camp.

Meanwhile, GP surgery landlord Assura’s NAV per share stood at 49.3p as at the 31 March 2024, the company’s year end. That’s comfortably higher than the 43p per share CEO, Jonathan Murphy, paid for the 198,975 shares he acquired on 21 May 2024 and the 42.5p per share CFO, Jayne Cottam, paid for the 58,800 shares she bought on the same day. Cottam didn’t stop there, acquiring a further 54,700 shares at 40.23p each on 29 May 2024. Assura, another bargain buy.

What’s the story with Supermarket Income Reit (SUPR)? On 20 May 2024, the company announced investment adviser, Benedict Green, and persons closely connected to him acquired between them a total of 330,179 SUPR shares for a total consideration of £250,010.69 on 16 May 2024. By close of play on 16 May, the shares were trading at a 15% discount to net assets. Enough of a discount there to count as a bargain buy.

That leaves Tritax Big Box (BBOX). 20 May 2024, BBOX announced a host of directors and other insiders between them bought a total of 333,458 shares in the company at around £1.67 a share. In terms of discounts, the transactions took place on 17 May 2024, when the share price closed at a 9.18% discount to net assets. Another set of directors picking up shares in their fund at a discount to net assets.

Not all about the discounts

Of course, there are a host of reasons why an insider chooses to acquire shares in the fund they are connected to at a specific point in time. The company may have, for example, been in a closed period either because results were due, as in the case of Assura, or a transaction was live such as BBOX’s acquisition of UK Commercial Property. The insider would therefore not have been able to acquire shares until the closed period was over.

Even so, surely it’s not a stretch to believe that, like the rest of us, insiders like to bag a bargain or two? And with shares trading at what are still wide discounts to net assets and with the next move in interest rates (arguably the main culprit behind those wide discounts) expected to be a cut, perhaps the insiders are indeed calling the bottom of the real estate cycle. Or at the very least, the bottom is close enough to tempt them to dip into their pockets and buy shares in their respective funds.

Results Round Up

The Week’s Investment Trust Results
In this week’s results round-up, one Chairman appears to have caught a bout of football fever (who can blame him ?), while one of London’s newest funds bags an award after an impressive first year.

By
Frank Buhagiar
12 Jul, 2024

Schroder British Opportunities (SBO) believes in patience
SBO reported a +2.5% increase in NAV per share for the latest full year. That compares to the previous year’s +3.1% gain. Chairman, Neil England, points out that ‘the current portfolio of innovative, predominantly UK companies are growing strongly, the majority in line or ahead of expectations.’ Because of this, ‘the patient investor that can look beyond the recent market environment should be well rewarded.’ The reason why patience is needed is because at present ‘The market appears not to discriminate effectively between companies that need cash and those that don’t.’ Helpfully, ‘The majority of the companies in your Company’s private portfolio are already profitable with positive operating cash flows or are funded through to that point.’

And while the patient investor waits for their reward, the company is looking to grow in other ways. As England points out, the fund first came to market in 2020. No mean feat for the IPO market was very challenging which did impact the amount of funds raised. Four years on and the Board is looking to do something about the trust’s size and is considering several options to increase the size of the Company, to increase its appeal to wealth managers and to improve its liquidity.

Winterflood: ‘NAV growth driven by fair value gains in PE portfolio (+3.8% NAV contribution), while listed holdings detracted (-0.8% NAV contribution). Share price TR +16.1%, as discount narrowed to 27.8% from 36.2%. Board continues to actively consider buybacks.’

TwentyFour Income Fund (TFIF), working the ABS
TFIF chalked up an +18.1% NAV total return per share for the year, quite some turnaround from the previous year’s -3.74%. Stripping out the record dividend payment of 9.96p per share, which was above the 8p per annum target, NAV per share increased +7.7% to 108.97p. Chair, Bronwyn Curtis OBE, puts the strong outcome down to the strategy of investing in higher yielding floating rate ABS (asset-backed securities) in a higher interest rate environment which has enabled the Company to produce a record dividend for the year for investors, equivalent to a 10% yield on the share price, alongside a strong return on the portfolio.

As for the outlook, sounds like the portfolio managers are preparing to take advantage of any market volatility ‘the Board is supportive of the Portfolio Manager’s focus on Western European secured assets with short maturities, keeping one eye on market volatility whilst also offering the potential to benefit from potential market dislocations.’

Numis: ‘TFIF has exceeded its dividend target in every year since launch and has increased the target from 6p to 8p in recent years. We believe it is well-placed to beat it again given a purchase yield of 11.5% on the portfolio and the continued high-rate environment.’

Winterflood: ‘Managers expect fundamental performance to deteriorate (given increasing consumer arrears and corporate defaults in the market) and therefore continue to prefer instruments with short spread duration, sufficient liquidity and low gearing, and particularly with secured collateral such as mortgages, senior secured corporate loans and auto loans.’

Onward Opportunities (ONWD) crowns first year with award
ONWD posted a +9.2% increase in NAV per share total return for the six-month period to 30 June 2024. That brings the 12-month NAV return to 30 June 2024 up to +20.6%. By contrast, the AIM All share could only muster a pedestrian-looking +3.1%. Thanks to numbers like that, ONWD finds itself in the top quartile in terms of performance amongst its peers over 12-months – the fund, which only came to market in 2023, ranks fourth out of 26 in the AIC UK Smaller Companies sector. No surprise then that ONWD was named ‘IPO of the Year’ at the Small Cap Awards.

Fund Manager, Laurence Hulse, points out that since the fund’s IPO 15 months ago, NAV is now up +21.6%. A tick in the box for the strategy centred around ‘truly active management’.

Winterflood: ‘Performance contributions from both core and nursery holdings; top contributors included MPAC Group, Vianet Group, Team17, Northcoders and Transense Technologies. Income stream expected to offset majority of total expense ratio in forthcoming year.’

Miton UK Microcap’s (MINI) year of two halves
MINI Chairman, Ashe Windham, has caught the football bug, if his full-year statement is anything to go by ‘The report covers the full year to 30 April 2024, a period which was, in football parlance, a game of two halves.’ Easy to see why. NAV fell -15.5% in the first half before a tentative recovery took hold in the second half that saw NAV increase by +3.1%. Overall, full-year NAV was down -12.9% compared to a +7.2% rise in the Deutsche Numis Smaller Companies 1000 Index. On performance, Windham highlights how, because of the the dearth of buying interest in UK microcaps over the last three years, marginal sellers have dominated the direction of share prices.

As for why the lack of buyers, ‘Every excuse in the book has been rolled out for why institutions and individuals should not buy UK equities’. Windham cites the Scottish referendum, Brexit, high turnover of Prime Ministers, the UK’s lack of technology stocks, stamp duty on the purchase of equities, tax on North Sea oil producers and geopolitical conflict.’ To add insult to injury, the investment trust sector has been discriminated against by the iniquitous double counting of fees such that wealth managers find real difficulties explaining why they should be buying closed end vehicles for their clients. The last three years have been incredibly frustrating. Whilst this is disappointing, the Trust was set up because quoted microcaps possess extraordinary upside potential. When microcaps succeed, sometimes their share prices can appreciate very dramatically.’

Winterflood: ‘Share price -15.1% as discount widened from 7.3% to 9.5%. The yearly share redemption to be offered to shareholders again this year with 1 October 2024 the latest date for redemption requests and redemption point on 5 November 2024.’

Size Matters

£1.00 compounded at 7% doubles in ten years, better if your blended yield is higher even by one percent.

Whilst it may not be possible to re-invest your earned dividends back into your current Trusts at a yield of 7%, there is normally several unloved Trusts where their sector is out of favour u should be able to re-invest in.

FTSE shares for passive income

A once-in-a-decade chance to buy FTSE shares for passive income.

Even with the market rally, many FTSE shares are trading at dirt cheap valuations, creating a rare opportunity to lock in higher dividends.

Zaven Boyrazian, MSc

Motley Fool

When investing, your capital is at risk. The value of your investments can go down as well as up and you may get back less than you put in.

FTSE shares have a solid reputation for helping investors generate significant income. With so many industry titans making the London Stock Exchange their home, dividend yields have always been generally higher in the UK compared to Europe or the US.

Even after the recent market rally, the FTSE 100 still offers a generous yield of 3.6% compared to the S&P 500’s 1.35% or the Euro Stoxx 50’s 2.9%. Digging a bit deeper reveals even better FTSE income opportunities for prudent investors to capitalise on. That’s because there are still plenty of dividend shares trading at discounted valuations, pushing yields even higher, especially in sectors like real estate.

A rare chance

Severe stock market corrections and crashes are memorable. But despite popular belief, these events are actually pretty rare.

Excluding the Covid crash in 2020, which reversed in a few months, it’s been over a decade since investors experienced a sharp downturn like 2022. And just like every correction before it, the overall stock market has bounced back aggressively. In fact, since October 2023, the FTSE 250 is up by just shy of 25%.

However, as previously mentioned, not every stock has been enjoying this rally. Some busineseses are still in recovery mode, awaiting promised interest cuts from the Bank of England.

Now that inflation is almost back on track, an interest rate cut seems to be just around the corner. And current forecasts suggest they could fall to 3.5% by the end of next year, versus 5.25% today.

What does this all mean? For real estate investment trusts (REITs) like Warehouse REIT (LSE:WHR), a slide in interest rates will improve margins, reduce balance sheet pressure, and even spark new growth. So when looking at its current share price, it begs the question of whether a buying opportunity that we may not see again for another decade has emerged.

Real estate investments in 2024

Directly investing in real estate comes with a lot of headaches. Apart from requiring a lot of initial capital to buy property, landlords need to find tenants, collect rent, and perform maintenance.

That’s where REITs have the upper hand. These companies are traded just like any other FTSE share. And they represent a portfolio of rent-generating properties managed by a team of professionals. In the case of Warehouse REIT, the firm specialises in smaller urban warehouses, often used for last-mile delivery of online orders.

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.

With a lot of debt on its books, the firm felt the pressure of aggressive rate hikes. And it was even forced to sell some of its locations in unfavourable market conditions to shore up the balance sheet. With that in mind, it’s not too surprising the stock price took a significant hit.

However, a total of £165m has been raised from disposals. This has already been put to work, reducing the interest burden. And based on its latest results, rental income’s back on the rise as demand for well-positioned warehouses ramps up while supply remains constrained.

That’s why I think a buying opportunity may have emerged for this enterprise. There are still financial pressures on its bottom line that may compromise dividends if economic conditions suddenly worsen. But assuming that interest rate cuts materialise in the near future, Warehouse’s downward slide may soon be over, I feel.

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2025 Passive Income

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑