Investment Trust Dividends

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Want to turn £20k into a £33,286 second income ?

Here are 3 steps to get started

Discover some of the best strategies when choosing which stocks to buy — and how to target a long-term second income with dividends.

Posted by Royston Wild

Published 29 November

FCIT

British coins and bank notes scattered on a surface
Image source: Getty Images

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services.

I strongly believe the best way to source a long-term second income is with dividend-paying shares. I’ve put my money where my mouth is, too, by loading my portfolio with companies delivering stable — and in many cases, large and growing — cash rewards to their investors.

Picking the best stocks to buy comes with some work, though. Only those committed to carefully researching shares and devising a sensible investing strategy typically enjoy a robust income year after year.

Let’s get things started with three simple rules I use myself. I’m confident they could eventually turn a £20,000 lump sum investment into a regular £33,286 passive income.

1. ISA benefits

The first thing I’ve chosen to do is cut out HRMC. They’re after both my trading gains and dividends, and also have their eyes on my portfolio drawdowns.

This is why opening a Stocks and Shares ISA can be critical. These accounts prevent HMRC from charging income tax on any withdrawals you make. And by stopping capital gains tax and dividend tax, investors have more money working for them and compounding over time.

The good news is these products also have a healthy £20,000 annual allowance. This is more than enough for almost all Britons (only 7% of people max out their ISAs each year).

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.

2. Growth, value, dividends

When building one’s portfolio, it’s important to aim for a balanced range of growth, value, and dividend-paying stocks.

Growth shares can deliver strong capital gains over time as profits rise and share prices increase. Value shares can also enjoy stunning price appreciation, albeit in a different way. They can re-rate over time as investors realise their cheapness, benefitting early buyers.

Dividend stocks, meanwhile, can provide a steady flow of income that can be reinvested to boost compound returns. What’s more, dividend shares — unlike growth and value stocks — can help a portfolio deliver a positive return even during stock market downturns.

3. Diversify for strength

Equally critical is to build a portfolio that spans spanning different regions and sectors. Investment trusts like F&C Investment Trust (LSE:FCIT) can be simple yet highly effective ways to achieve this.

This FTSE 100 trust has delivered 54 straight years of dividend increases, illustrating the stability it offers. But that’s not all. Its share price has risen at an average annual rate of 6% over the past decade.

F&C manages roughly £6.6bn worth of assets, including more than 350 global equities. Holdings are as varied as Nvidia and Amazon, right through to HSBCSiemens, and Pfizer.

Like any stocks-focused trust, performance can suffer during broader stock market downturns. But as we’ve seen, its commitment to share investing also helps it tap into the lucrative long-term returns equities can bring.

Targeting a £33k income

With a diversified portfolio including trusts like this, I believe it’s quite possible to make an average yearly return of 8%. At this rate, someone investing £500 a month could come out with a healthy £475,513 after 25 years.

This could then be invested in 7%-yielding shares to target an annual second income of £33,286.

One small problem being, even allowing for inflation, would be to buy 20 different shares, Investment Trusts/ETFs paying a ‘secure’ 7%, if interest rates were very low, of course they could be higher.

Discount Delver

Biggest investment trust discount changes over the past week November 2025

We reveal the .

28th November 2025

by Dave Baxter from interactive investor

Discount Delver thumbnail

Investment trusts, due to their closed-ended structure, offer investors the chance of picking up a potential bargain. Such an opportunity arises when a trust’s share price is lower than the underlying investments held by the trust (the net asset value, or NAV). 

However, a trust trading on a discount to NAV is not necessarily a buying opportunity. There’s likely a good reason why the trust is cheap, such as subdued short- or long-term performance, or poor investor sentiment towards how it invests.   

In our weekly series, interactive investor highlights the 10 biggest investment trust discount moves over the past week. 

In total, nearly 400  investment trusts  have been screened, with the data sourced from Morningstar. Venture Capital Trusts (VCTs) have been excluded. We also strip out trusts with less than £30 million in assets and those that are not available on the interactive investor platform.

Please note that we had to run the data slightly early this week – from 18 November to 25 November. A few names that cropped up in last week’s list have continued to experience discount widening..

Note the presence of Hydrogen Capital Growth 

HGEN

5.79%

, a name that is in the process of winding down and saw the listing of its shares restored last week. The shares now trade on a discount of around 62%, although the oddities of a wind-down process can sometimes produce confusing numbers.

The woes of the Renewable Energy Infrastructure sector are plain to see once again, with five names from the space appearing in the table.

There’s Foresight Solar Ord 

FSFL

0.30%

, which, as noted last week, recently revealed an NAV fall in the third quarter of 2025 due to a variety of challenging factors, as well as its rivals NextEnergy Solar Ord 

NESF

0.20% and Bluefield Solar Income Fund BSIF0.70%. There’s also an appearance from Aquila Energy Efficiency Trust Ord AEET2.83%.

The sector might be struggling but there’s also the chance of corporate activity, providing investors with an exit at an uplift at least to recent prices.

Foresight Solar chair Tony Roper noted in the update earlier this month that the board “continue to analyse options available to deliver the best potential outcome for investors”, for example.

NextEnergy Solar, meanwhile, announced the appointment of a new chair, Tony Quinlan, this week, who has “deep expertise in corporate finance, mergers and acquisitions, and business transformation”.

The Bluefield fund announced earlier this month that it would initiate the process of putting itself up for sale.

Meanwhile, a troubled name in the process of winding down, Digital 9 Infrastructure Ord 

DGI9

0.00%

, saw its discount widen thanks to fresh bad news. The trust announced this week that minority shareholders in Arqiva Group, a holding representing 75% of Digital 9’s gross assets, want to sell down their stake.

However, the trust has judged this deal to be unsatisfactory, noting: “The board and [investment manager] InfraRed continues to judge that pursuing a divestment of its stake in Arqiva prior to the resolution of the key contractual and financing decisions noted above would be premature as it would not result in an acceptable outcome for realising shareholder value.”

A few names from different sectors also crop up in this week’s list, in the form of UK funds Aberforth Geared Value & Income Ord 

AGVI

0.61%

 and CT UK High Income Ord 

CHI

0.45%, as well as the hard-running gold play Golden Prospect Precious Metal Ord GPM3.41%.

There’s also Fair Oaks Income 2021 Ord 

FAIR

0.00%

, a niche debt trust that has tended to deliver enormous dividends. The shares traded on a 16.7% dividend yield at the time of writing.

Investment trustSectorCurrent discount (%)Discount/premium change over past week (pp)
Hydrogen Capital Growth HGEN5.79%Renewable Energy Infrastructure-62.4-6.9
Digital 9 Infrastructure Ord DGI90.00%Infrastructure-82.7-6.8
Foresight Solar Ord FSFL0.30%Renewable Energy Infrastructure-35.8-5.8
NextEnergy Solar Ord NESF0.20%Renewable Energy Infrastructure-45.6-5.6
Bluefield Solar Income Fund BSIF0.70%Renewable Energy Infrastructure-38.7-5.6
Aberforth Geared Value & Income Ord AGVI0.61%UK Smaller Companies-10.5-5.5
Fair Oaks Income 2021 Ord FAIR0.00%Debt – Structured Finance-5.9-5.2
Aquila Energy Efficiency Trust Ord AEET2.83%Renewable Energy Infrastructure-46.5-3.7
Golden Prospect Precious Metal Ord GPM3.41%Commodities & Natural Resources-13.9-3.4
CT UK High Income Ord CHI0.45%UK Equity Income-0.9-3.3

Source: Morningstar. Data from close of trading 19 November to 26 November 2025. 

FGEN

HY25 Results Highlights

28 November 2025

FORESIGHT ENVIRONMENTAL INFRASTRUCTURE LIMITED

(“FGEN” or the “Company”)

Half-year results for the six months ended 30 September 2025

FGEN, a leading investor in private environmental infrastructure assets across the UK and mainland Europe, is pleased to announce the Company’s interim results for the six months ended 30 September 2025.

Ed Warner, Chair of FGEN, said:

“FGEN has delivered another period of solid progress despite persistent sector headwinds. Our diversified portfolio continues to generate strong cash flows, providing a dependable foundation for dividend growth and long-term value creation.

We remain on track to meet our full-year dividend target, supported by proactive portfolio management and disciplined follow-on investments that unlock further value. While the market backdrop has been challenging, our strategy positions FGEN to deliver sustainable income and NAV growth without reliance on new fundraising.

“Looking ahead, we are confident in our portfolio’s combined ability to deliver long-term predictable income for investors alongside attractive upside potential from our growth assets. We remain optimistic about the structural drivers underpinning the green economy.

“We continue to be fully committed, alongside our Investment Manager, to closing the discount to NAV and ensuring that FGEN’s share price more accurately reflects the intrinsic value of its portfolio.”

Summary of results:

Resilient Earnings and NAV :

•   NAV per share of 104.7 pence, delivering positive NAV total return for the period of 2.0% after payment of dividends.

•   Annualised NAV total return of 7.2% since IPO.

•   Company remains on track to deliver the full year dividend target of 7.96 pence, representing a yield of 12% on the share price at the date of this report.

Strong operational performance:

•   Strong operational performance with assets generating dividend cover of 1.22x in the period, after amortisation of project-level debt facilities.

•   Company remains on track to maintain or improve operational performance over the remainder of the financial year.

•   Generation +0.5% over budget¹, with anaerobic digestion facilities continuing to perform particularly well.

Growth assets already delivering NAV uplift:

•   CNG Fuels growing truck numbers and maintaining profitability.

•   Rjukan aquaculture now fully operational, after successfully delivering its first trout harvest in the period.

•   The Glasshouse continues to onboard new customers and targets being cash flow breakeven later this year.

1.  After accounting for the anticipated recovery of downtime from operator guarantees and insurances

Trust in Trusts

Top 10 most-popular funds in October 2025

Fund IA sectorChange on last monthOne-year return (%)Three-year return (%)
Royal London Short Term Money Market (Accumulating)Short Term Money MarketNo change4.515
Vanguard LifeStrategy 80% EquityMixed investment 40%-85% sharesNo change17.345
L&G Global Technology Index TrustTechnologyUp one38.5160.5
Artemis Global Income I AccGlobal Equity IncomeDown one44.693
Vanguard FTSE Global All Cap IndexGlobalUp one19.854
HSBC FTSE All-World Index C AccGlobalDown one20.458.1
Vanguard LifeStrategy 60% EquityMixed investment 40%-85% sharesUp one14.235.6
Vanguard LifeStrategy 100% Equity A AccGlobalDown one20.554.7
Fidelity Index WorldGlobalNo change20.360.3
Jupiter Gold & Silver I GBP AccSpecialistNew entry87172.4

Source: interactive investor. Performance data to 3 November 2025. Note: the top 10 is based on the number of “buys” during the month of October. Past performance is not a guide to future performance.

Top 10 most-popular trusts in October 2025

RankingInvestment trustChange from SeptemberOne-year return to 31 October (%)Three-year return to 31 October (%)
1Scottish Mortgage Ord (LSE:SMT)Unchanged35.763.2
2Polar Capital Technology Ord (LSE:PCT)Up 253.4151.6
3Greencoat UK Wind (LSE:UKW)Down 1-13.2-9.8
4City of London Ord (LSE:CTY)Down 126.949.4
5Temple Bar Ord (LSE:TMPL)Unchanged46.596.3
6Golden Prospect Precious Metal Ord (LSE:GPM)New96.1187.7
7Henderson Far East Income Ord (LSE:HFEL)New2038.4
8Fidelity China Special Situations Ord (LSE:FCSS)Down 25596
9NextEnergy Solar Ord (LSE:NESF)New-7.5-24.4
10JPMorgan Global Growth & Income Ord (LSE:JGGI)Down 36.954.8

Source: FE Analytics. Performance data to 31 October 2025. Note: the top 10 is based on the number of “buys” during the month of October. Past performance is not a guide to future performance.

Change to the Snowball

The Snowball booked a profit of £907.80 with TRIG.

The Snowball only owned the share for one week, sometimes it’s better to be lucky than clever. The intention is to use ‘part’ of the windfall to do some dividend washing, where you buy a share before the xd date and sell either on the day or later, to provide contingency income for 2026, just in case any dividends are cut.

So the Snowball has sold LAND, earning a dividend of £307.00 paid in January, for a loss of £13.00. If you get the timing right, sometimes it can also print a tiny profit.

There are dividends to be received tomorrow of £641.00, 1k to be re-invested in FSFL, maybe.

Among those set to exit the FTSE 250 is Pinewood Technologies Group PLC, rounding off a short stint in the mid-cap index. The provider of software to the automotive retailing sector replaced Warehouse REIT in the index after the logistics warehouses investor was acquired by Blackstone Inc.

Among those set to exit the FTSE 250 is Pinewood Technologies Group PLC, rounding off a short stint in the mid-cap index. The provider of software to the automotive retailing sector replaced Warehouse REIT in the index after the logistics warehouses investor was acquired by Blackstone Inc.

Foresight Solar Fund Ltd, an investor in environmental infrastructure, is also set for relegation.

RECI

Real Estate Credit Investments Limited (the “Company”)

Ordinary Dividend for RECI LN (Ordinary shares)

Real Estate Credit Investments Limited announces today that it has declared a second dividend of 3.0 pence per Ordinary Share for the year ending 31 March 2026. The dividend is to be paid on 02 January 2026 to Ordinary Shareholders on the register at the close of business on 05 December 2025. The ex-dividend date is 04 December 2025.

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