Investment Trust Dividends

Category: Uncategorized (Page 378 of 378)

Compounding – The Snowball effect.

When the Nobel Prize-winning scientist Albert Einstein was asked to identify the most powerful force in the universe, he is said to have replied: “compound interest”. It’s no joke to say that the mathematical phenomenon of compounding or the ability for gains to grow on gains and income to arise from income provides a powerful tool for anyone seeking to accumulate wealth.

However you will need time to make it work

Blog Rules

The blog rules there are only 2.

  1. Buy Investment Trusts that pay a ‘secure’ dividend to buy
    more Investment Trusts that pay a ‘secure’ dividend. The snowball effect.
  2. Any Trust that drastically changes it dividend policy will be
    sold even at a loss.

Plan
Option A
After ten years to take a ‘pension’ of
16k on seed capital of 100k where u keep your capital.

Option B
You gamble with your future by trading TR
where u plan to buy an annuity with an unknown sum,
which could be x times £2,195.

Canada Life figures show the 65-year-old with a £100,000 pension pot could buy an annuity linked to the retail price index (RPI) that would generate a starting annual income of £3,896. That’s up from £2,195 in the New Year following a 77% spike in rates this year.
Oct 22

2024 will u gamble with you future or invest for your families future,
the choice is yours.

2024 Income Dividends

The Motley Fool

3 steps to increase income from dividend shares in 2024
Dividend shares have long been a powerful tool for generating passive income. But with 2023 coming to a close, many investors are now looking for new ways to bolster this income stream. There are various ways to achieve this, and not all of them require injecting more capital into the stock market. Let’s take a look.

1. Set an income goal
The first step is to look at what a portfolio is already generating in terms of yield. On average, the FTSE 100 delivers around a 4% yield. But depending on the strategy an investor is following, this income stream could be higher or lower.

Let’s assume a portfolio contains a blend of income and growth stocks, subsequently resulting in an overall yield of 3%. With that number at hand, investors can now pick a new target pay out. For this example, let’s say an investor wants to boost this yield to 5% in 2024. What should be the next step?

2. Portfolio rebalancing
Not every household has the luxury of earning excess cash right now. After all, the cost-of-living crisis is ongoing for many, and the economic conditions are far from ideal. However, it’s still possible to source some capital by reorganising what’s already in an investment portfolio.

If dividends are the goal, then perhaps it may be worth examining growth-oriented positions. A review of each company could reveal a broken investment thesis. Or perhaps firms may simply not be living up to previous expectations. As such, investors need to decide whether an opportunity cost exists. In other words, while dividends may deliver lower returns, are they a more reliable way to grow wealth?

Dividend shares should also be looked at under a microscope. There are hundreds of income shares on the London Stock Exchange, and not all of them are worth owning. Higher-yielding opportunities could be hiding in plain sight, and simply swapping out underwhelming shares for superior ones could help push a passive income stream to new heights. Of course, the question then becomes: how do investors find these superior opportunities?

3. Identify the best income shares
All too often, income investors become fixated on the yield that a stock is offering. Yet in practice, this can lead to critical errors. While exceptional, there are multiple stocks in the FTSE 350 that are currently offering a sustainable dividend yield of around 10%.

At first glance, they sound like bargain buying opportunities if shareholder pay outs can indeed be maintained. However, in most cases, these yields are being driven by a rapidly falling stock price due to rising concerns about the long-term outlook. Therefore, while dividends are chunky, the continued decay of the share price offsets any gains made, resulting in the destruction of wealth despite passive income increasing.

One example of this is, in my opinion, British American Tobacco. With health regulations worldwide becoming increasingly strict, the future of the cigarette market looks bleak at best. And even the management team agrees. That’s why the firm is rapidly accelerating its transition to non-combustible products, but whether it can do so fast enough has yet to be seen.

In short, investors targeting a higher portfolio yield need to look beyond shareholder pay outs of attractive income shares. Only then can a tremendous income opportunity be discovered.

The post 3 steps to increase income from dividend shares in 2024 appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.

2023 Dividends Earned

£8,686.00

This blog has a ten year plan to own Investment Trusts that pay

dividends to buy more Investment Trusts that pay dividends, the snowball

effect, to be used as a ‘pension’ where u retain your capital.

Current target 16k p.a

Newer posts »

© 2026 Passive Income Live

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑