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Are the highest-yielding equity trusts a sound investment?

Trustnet

By Emma Wallis, News editor, Trustnet, 01 May 2024:

Income-seeking investors can find rich pickings amongst the investment trust sector, with many trusts offering yields above government bonds plus the prospect of capital gains and an extra kicker if discounts narrow.

Wealth manager Stifel found that 32 trusts investing primarily in equities have a yield of 4% or more and a market capitalisation above £100m. This compares to yields of 4.5% and 4.4% from two-year and 10-year gilts, respectively..

“To disentangle the effects of discounts to NAV, we looked at the highest dividend yield on NAV instead. If you exclude special situations (i.e. returns of capital driven by managed wind-downs), examples of relatively high income on an absolute basis are Henderson Far East Income, Chelverton UK Dividend, Aberforth Split Level Income and abrdn Equity Income, all with NAV yields ranging between 7% and 11%.”..

Meanwhile, James Carthew, head of investment companies at QuotedData, warned investors to look out for value traps, where yields are high because the share price is cheap and likely to fall further. The best way to avoid value traps is to steer clear of the highest decile of high-yield equities, he noted.

“I think this explains Henderson Far East Income, which produces a yield far higher than most competing Asian income trusts yet its long-term total returns are by far the worst in its peer group (an average of 4.7% per annum over the past 10 years compared to 6.6% for abrdn Asian Income – the next worse – and 10.3% for Invesco Asia – the best),” Carthew said.

“Similarly, abrdn Equity Income is the worst-performing trust in its peer group (2.4% per year over 10 years, compared to 4.0% for Lowland, the next worse). However, there is another factor at play here, both trusts have highish exposures to smaller companies, which have been lagging their larger peers.”

At the other end of the spectrum, Carthew believes Henderson High Income is a better choice.

“It has a trick up its sleeve when it comes to generating its attractive yield. It borrows money long term at fixed rates and invests that in higher-yielding bonds. That generates income that goes toward the dividend and allows David Smith, the fund’s manager, to avoid the value traps and buy lower-yielding stocks with better business models and faster dividend and earnings growth. Investors in Henderson High Income get the best of both worlds, therefore.”

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