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Investment Trust Dividends

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Financial Planning

Here’s how I’m planning for a £2,300 a month second income

The MotleyFool

Oliver Rodzianko gives us the lowdown on his plan for a healthy second income in retirement. He reckons investing is his path to financial freedom.

I absolutely love planning my finances. While others may find this boring, there’s something adventurous to me about slowly building a cache of money over time. My end game strategy is to have a second income in retirement that will pay all my bills, as long as my mortgage is fully paid off. Here’s how I plan to do it.

Rules of the game
The game goes like this. I have to work incredibly hard, as without that, there’s no way I can earn enough to pull off these two goals:

Get a mortgage on a house and pay it off by the time I retire
Build up a £500,000 investment portfolio, independent of the equity in my home
Now, that’s quite a daunting challenge, but I think it’s possible. I’d need to start with just £5,000 and invest an extra £200 a month over 25 years at a total yearly return of 12.5% including price gains and dividends. That would get me to roughly £500,000.

What’s great is that I plan to do all of my investing through a Stocks and Shares ISA. So, I won’t have to pay any tax when I come to sell my investments, or when I receive dividends.

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.

Now, to hit my £2,300 a month dividend income target, I’d need a range of companies yielding 5.5% per year, as well as rising in price regularly. Of course, the risk is that this doesn’t happen.

Shares like these
I like businesses like Record (LSE:REC), which is a currency management firm in the UK. It offers a dividend yield of 6.8%. That’s more than I bargained for, but one thing I’ve learned is to have low expectations and overachieve on them.

I like that the business has a very stable balance sheet. It has less than 20% of its assets balanced by different forms of debt. Also, it’s growing very fast. Over the past three years, its earnings have grown at a 20.7% rate as an annual average.

Also, because the shares have grown in price consistently, if I’d bought them five years ago, I’d be getting 11% of my initial investment every year in dividends now. That’s because the dividend yield applies to the present price, not what I initially paid.

However, I also need to be aware of the risks if I invest in Record. One of the main ones is that its assets are growing faster than its revenues, which can be an indication that the business is becoming less efficient. Over time, this could reduce how fast the shares grow in price.

Covering my bills
If I can build up a portfolio of five to 10 quality and high-dividend businesses like Record, I’ll have great diversification that will help to protect me from anything going wrong in one company.

If all of these businesses average out to a 5.5% dividend yield, I’ll have £27,500 a year. That will also be tax-free because of my ISA.

With that, I might not be taking luxury holidays, but it will certainly give me the ability to do many of the things that I enjoy and live a nice, stress-free life without any active work. To me, that’s true financial freedom.

Stocks and Shares ISA

How I’d try and turn a £20k Stocks and Shares ISA into a recurring £16,634 income

The MotleyFool

Story by John Fieldsend

Here’s how drip-feeding £200 a month into a Stocks and Shares ISA might grow into a recurring £16,634 income – received year after year, come rain or shine – that wouldn’t even eat into the nest egg.

The ISA is crucial. The Financial Times called ISAs “arguably the best investment ‘wrapper’ in the Western world” and it’s hard to disagree.


I can deposit up to £20k a year – with no balance limit – and every pound gets a lifetime tax exemption on interest, capital gains or dividends. These taxes can take off 39%.

Passive Income

The Motley Fool

436 shares in this FTSE dividend star could make me £1,567 a month in passive income

Story by Simon Watkins


Passive income is money earned through minimal daily effort, which is the sort of idea I like.

Through relatively little work, this new stream of income can provide more choices in life. A better place to live, more exotic holidays, and even the opportunity to work less or to retire early.


For me, there has been no better way of doing this than buying high-quality stocks that pay high dividends.

I have five stocks in my high-yield portfolio. They are Phoenix Group Holdings yielding 10.2%, M&G at 8.7%, Legal & General at 8%, Aviva at 6.9%, and British American Tobacco (LSE: BATS) at 10%.

However, for me it is not enough that the stocks pay high dividends.

They also need to have a strong core business, so they can continue to pay me high yields.
And they must also appear to be undervalued against their peers. I do not want my dividend gains erased by share price losses, after all.

Ticking all the boxes
I recently added British American Tobacco to my high-yield portfolio because it ticked all these boxes for me.

It has a history of paying high yields. Aside from the current 10%, the yields in 2022, 2021, and 2020 were 6.7%, 7.9%, and 7.8%, respectively.

The core business is currently transitioning away from combustible (tobacco) products to non-combustible (vapes and patches) ones.

This appears to be going well so far. Adjusted profit from operations rose 3.1% in 2023 from 2022 to reach £12.47bn. Adjusted diluted earnings per share (EPS) increased 4% over the same period to 375.6p. And adjusted net debt fell 7.4% to £33.94bn.

One risk here is that its transition away from traditional products is delayed for some reason. Another is any litigation from the effects of its products in the past.

Yet the shares currently trade on the key price-to-earnings (P/E) measurement at just 6.1, against a peer group average of 11.8.

A discounted cash flow analysis shows the stock to be around 57% undervalued at the present price of necessarily ever reach that point, but it underlined to me that they are very good value.

Maximising dividends through compounding
Dividend compounding is the same principle as compound interest in bank accounts, but rather than interest being reinvested, dividend payments are.

The difference in returns between withdrawing my dividends paid each year and reinvesting them is massive.

For example, 436 shares in British American Tobacco would cost me just over £10,000.


The 10% dividend on these shares would make me £1,000 in the first year. If I withdrew that, I would receive another £1,000 the following year, provided the dividend remained the same.

If I kept withdrawing my payouts and the dividend stayed the same, I would have made £30,000 after 30 years.

However, if I reinvested the dividends back into British American Tobacco stock, I would have £198,374 after 30 years. That would pay me £18,803 a year in passive income, or £1,567 every month.

This is provided the yield averages the same it may go down or up, as dividends and share prices change. And inflation would affect the buying power of my income.

However, it highlights that big passive income can be generated from a much smaller initial investment.

Current Portfolio

RGL has since trimmed their dividend and most probably will

do so in the near future.

LBOW as it winds down, no longer pays a dividend.

Excluding the 2 Trusts above they blended yield is 9%.

VSL, RECI: their dividends are unlikely to increase but provides

funds to re-invest in the portfolio.

The other Trusts the dividends should gently increase excluding

ADIG,TENT which are winding down.

Dividend re-investment plan

The fcast for the portfolio for dividends earned this year is 8k.

For anyone starting out on their investing journey is

unlikely to earn 8k in dividends in year one.

But the blog portfolio assumes no cash is added to the fire

and it’s likely that you would be making regular contributions

to improve your total return.

If u compound 8k @ 7% for

10 years = £15,760.00

20 Years = £30,960.00

25 years = £49,440.00

Remember you will retain control of your final destination and

all your capital rather than gifting it to a pension provider.

A journey of 1,000 miles starts with one small step.

Confucius

APAX

Apax Global Alpha Limited

2023 Annual Dividend Announcement

This notification is made in accordance with the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules.

The Directors of the Company are pleased to declare that a dividend will be payable, for the financial period ending
31 December 2023 in accordance with the following timetable:

Ex-Dividend Date:14 March 2024
Record Date:15 March 2024
Payment Date:4 April 2024
Total Dividend Payment:GBP 27,698,083
Dividend Per Share:GBP 5.64 p

TENT

Triple Point Energy Transition plc

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

PUBLICATION OF CIRCULAR REGARDING A PROPOSED MANAGED WIND-DOWN OF THE COMPANY AND RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

AND

NOTICE OF GENERAL MEETING

Further to the announcement of 13 December 2023, the Board of Directors of Triple Point Energy Transition plc (LSE: TENT) (the “Board”), the London Stock Exchange listed investment company focused on building a portfolio of infrastructure investments that support the energy transition, today announces that a shareholder circular (the “Circular”) is expected to be published today regarding the proposed managed wind-down of the Company, which will require the amendment of the Company’s investment objective and Investment Policy.

The Circular also contains a notice convening a general meeting of the Company (the “General Meeting”) at which approval will be sought from Shareholders for:

· the proposed change to the Company’s investment objective and Investment Policy to facilitate the managed wind-down of the Company and orderly realisation of its assets;

· the conditional disposal by TENT Holdings of the Field Debt Facility to Triple Point Leasing Limited (“TPLL”);

· the conditional disposal by TENT Holdings of the LED Facility to Boxed Light Services Limited (“Boxed”) for onward assignment by Boxed to TPLL;

· the associated amendments to the Investment Management Agreement.

The General Meeting will be held at 9.30a.m. on 22 March 2024 at 1 King William Street, London, EC4N 7AF.

The Board will keep Shareholders informed of its intentions concerning returns of capital, mechanisms for which may include tender offers, other schemes for the return of capital and/or the buying back of Shares as the portfolio is realised. Throughout the Managed Wind-Down, the Board will follow the principle of seeking to balance the optimum scale and accompanying costs to the Company of the relevant method of return with the desire to accomplish that return as quickly as practicable, without eroding the value to be distributed.

The Company intends to continue to pay dividends to Shareholders following the commencement of the Managed Wind-Down in line with Shareholder feedback and in order to maintain investment trust status. However the Company does not expect to be able to continue paying dividends at the current rate. The payment of any future dividends to Shareholders and the level of such dividends will depend on the Group continuing to own assets which generate sufficient income and cash flow to cover such dividends.

££££££££££££££

Current yield 8%

Current discount to NAV 29%

Dividends xd this week

Thursday 7 March

abrdn Diversified Income and Growth PLC ex-dividend payment date
Assura PLC ex-dividend payment date
Athelney Trust PLC ex-dividend payment date
Crown Place VCT PLC ex-dividend payment date
CT UK Capital & Income Investment Trust PLC ex-dividend payment date
JPMorgan Global Emerging Markets Income Trust PLC ex-dividend payment date
JPMorgan Global Growth & Income PLC ex-dividend payment date
Law Debenture Corp PLC ex-dividend payment date
Mid Wynd International Investment Trust PLC ex-dividend payment date
Personal Assets Trust PLC ex-dividend payment date
Premier Miton Global Renewables Trust PLC ex-dividend payment date
Rights & Issues Investment Trust PLC ex-dividend payment date
Ruffer Investment Co Ltd ex-dividend payment date
Safestore Holdings PLC ex-dividend payment date
Schroder Real Estate Investment Trust Ltd ex-dividend payment date
SDCL Energy Efficiency Income Trust PLC ex-dividend payment date
Temple Bar Investment Trust PLC ex-dividend payment date
Utilico Emerging Markets Trust PLC ex-dividend payment date

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