DFM Bulletin Issue 1

Page 18

Chris Beckett, Head of Equity Research, Quilter Cheviot

Matt Ennion, Fund Research Analyst, Quilter Cheviot

OUTLOOK FOR UK DIVIDENDS: STILL A RELIABLE INCOME?

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tock markets have rebounded quickly from their lows this year, but the outlook for UK dividend investors remains mixed. Many companies have cut or suspended their dividends in response to the coronavirus crisis and given an impending global recession, these look unlikely to be reinstated in the short term. Nevertheless, we expect the UK and global economy to recover in 2021, with dividends rebounding too. The picture will vary sector by sector and company by company. Food retailers and consumers goods companies have maintained their dividends, for example, with these sectors tending to either be unaffected by the pandemic or beneficiaries of it. Pay-outs from the oil and gas sector, a highly cyclical part of the market, are likely to remain at a permanently lower level. However, dividends will remain an important source of income for many investors, even in the short term. Dividend income is likely to be more concentrated amongst sectors, but there are ways to diversify your income sources and wider merits to sticking with UK dividends.

UK shares still offer a relatively high level of income In both absolute and relative terms, UK shares still offer a high level of income. As of the end of May 2020, the FTSE 100 offered a yield of slightly more than 4%, significantly higher than the yield on ten-year UK government bonds, which stood at just under 0.2% at the end of the month.

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Summer 2020  www.rsmr.co.uk

Furthermore, this ‘income premium’ is unlikely to change in the short term. UK dividends have already fallen by around a third, including a total suspension of dividends by the banking sector as the regulator demanded the banks display prudence with their balance sheets. While we could see UK dividends fall by 50% in total from their 2019 peak in a worst case scenario, this would still leave the market trading on a yield of round 3%. Bond yields are likely to remain low for the foreseeable future, helping to sustain the attractiveness of the stock market even in the face of dividends cuts or suspensions.

Dividend resilience: not all sectors are created equal Dividend cuts have been highly concentrated by sector. There are those who simply cannot pay, including businesses in the travel or retail sector, many of which have been directly affected by lockdown measures. There are others who believe it is prudent not to pay, such as the housebuilders, which now looks like a case of excessive prudence. Many housebuilders have net cash positions with some encouraging signs that at least some in the sector are coping well with the crisis. There are some companies, such as BP in the oil sector, which have not yet adjusted their dividends. We do not expect a cut in the dividend in the second quarter, with the longer-term outlook contingent on oil prices. Overall, we expect the dividend yield on our UK 40 stock model to fall to around 4.1% in our base case, with a worst-case scenario seeing a dividend yield of 3.2%. This would still be an attractive yield compared to other


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