10 reasons to invest for income

in #income8 years ago

1 PLIGHT OF SAVERS
The search for income has intensified in recent years as it has hit home that low growth and low interest rates are here to stay in the developed world. In the UK, the Bank of England base rate has been at an historic low of just 0.5% since March 2009 – and there’s no indication that this will change any time soon.
2 GREATER RISK = GREATER REWARD?
Justin Modray, founder of Candid Financial Advice, a recently-launched independent financial adviser (IFA), warns that, aside from shopping around for a better savings account, there’s no magical way of earning more interest: a higher income means taking on greater risk.

“If you can’t afford to lose money then taking risk is probably a bad idea, but if you can afford to risk some money, or already have a portfolio of investments, then other sources of income stack up well versus cash.”

3 CAPITAL PROTECTION
This doesn’t mean to say that, by steppingup the risk scale, you could end up losing your shirt: protecting capital is an essential part of any fund manager’s role.

However, equity income managers tend to be more cautious in their choice of stocks, typically looking for those that will provide steady capital growth rather than stellar returns.

For example, during the technology boom in the late 1990s and at the turn of the millennium many income managers avoided speculative technology companies. For a while these funds lagged the stock market as money flowed into the tech sector, but the strategy paid off as investors in equity income funds were shielded from the worst of the subsequent crash.
4 LOWER VOLATILITY
While income funds might not shoot the lights out, income-based investing can act as a prop to performance when equity markets are in the doldrums or experiencing huge swings in volatility, as they did in August and September 2015, for example. That’s because many high-yielding stocks – the type that income fund managers tend to hold – are defensive in their nature. A company paying a good and rising dividend often communicates strong financial wellbeing, since dividends ultimately come from earnings and profits. And they are less likely to be dumped wholesale in difficult markets, because the income helps to compensate investors for any loss of capital value. In short, income investing produces an overall total return that is less volatile than the equity market as a whole.

5 SUPERIOR PERFORMANCE
In fact, investing using income as a guide to investment selection almost invariably produces long-term outperformance. Just look at the total returns from the FTSE 100 and FTSE All- Share indices compared with the IMA UK Equity Income index. Over one, three and five-year periods, stocks designed to generate an income have outperformed.
6 POWER OF COMPOUNDING
No other investment has endured quite like equity income. The attractions of equity income remain the same today as they have always done, a key one being the power of compounding. Income investing exploits the benefits of compounding – the earning of returns on returns already made.

In fact, reinvesting income is one of the biggest determinants of returns over time. Say you had bought £100 of gilts in 1899; your investment would be worth just 75p today in real terms if you hadn’t reinvested the income, according to the Barclays Capital Equity Gilt Study 2015. With reinvestment, you would have £457 in today’s terms.

The argument is even more powerful for equities. If you invested £100 in the UK stock market in 1899, it would today have grown to £184 in real terms without the reinvestment of dividends – but a mammoth £28,261 with reinvestment.

You don’t need to invest for more than a century to reap the benefits. The chart below shows the effect of income reinvestment on returns over five years. The blue line shows total returns for the FTSE All-Share index over that period, while the green line includes highlights the extra returns generated by investing for income and reinvesting those dividends.
7 DIVIDEND GROWTH
Dividend growth over the years is vital for income-seeking investors, particularly those facing a long and hopefully fruitful retirement, and many income funds are focused on growing dividends.
Income generation is a hot topic in the financial press, but it is going to become an even more important issue in years to come as the retiring baby boomers inflate the income-seeking population, not just in the UK but throughout much of the developed world and China.

Let’s use a simple example to illustrate the importance of dividend growth. Say a 60-year-old invests £20,000 equally across two income funds. They both yield 5%, so give a starting income of £1,000 per year each.

Fund X increases its payouts by 5% per year, while fund Y manages to increase payouts by 10% a year. By age 75, 15 years later, the significance of this difference is all too clear. Income from fund X, which grew at 5% per year, has risen to almost £2,080 per year; income from fund Y, which grew at double the rate, has soared to £4,180 per year – more than twice as much.
8 INVESTMENT DISCIPLINE
As companies with strong financial wellbeing attract investment, the price goes up and the dividend yield comes down. At this stage an equity income manager will often sell, looking to reinvest in the next high-yielding opportunity. Equity income managers’ strategy therefore causes them to buy shares when they are cheap and sell when they are expensive – one of the cornerstones of successful investing.

9 CAPITAL GROWTH
It is equally important to grow capital where possible. Many income fund managers aim to identify value in areas other investors have overlooked – another key driver of performance.

The tobacco sector is a prime example of an unloved area in which some income fund managers saw potential at the turn of the century. They were handsomely rewarded: between 2000 and 2011 British American Tobacco’s share price surged by more than 780%. With dividends reinvested, the total return was 1,529%. Again, some income fund managers are focusing their attentions on medium sized and smaller companies. Historically such companies were expected to reinvest profits in the business rather than paying them out to shareholders, but canny managers such as Miton’s Gervais Williams are finding valuable income opportunities among these smaller, faster-growing enterprises.

10 INFLATION PROTECTION
If your capital doesn’t keep pace with inflation, then its value is clearly being eroded. In other words, it is losing value in real terms. Inflation has not been much of an issue in recent years, but over the longer term it is likely to rise again.

Say, for example, inflation is running at around 2% (the Bank of England’s target rate). If you are a basic-rate taxpayer (paying income tax at 20%), then you’d have to achieve a return of 2.5% on a taxable savings account just to stand still. If you are a 40% taxpayer, you’d need a 3.33% return, and if you’re a 45% taxpayer you would need to earn 3.64% on your cash for it to keep pace with inflation.

Sort:  

Source: https://www.marketviews.com/faith-glasgow/10-reasons-to-invest-for-income/

Not citing sources of copied works is plagiarism and frowned upon by the community.

Sharing content and add value by:

  • Using a few sentences from your source in “quotes.” Use HTML tags or Markdown.
  • Linking to your source
  • Include your own original thoughts and ideas on what you have shared.

Repeated plagiarized posts are considered spam. Spam is discouraged by the community, and may result in action from the cheetah bot.

Creative Commons: If you are posting content under a Creative Commons license, please attribute and link according to the specific license. If you are posting content under CC0 or Public Domain please consider noting that at the end of your post.

Not indicating that the content you copy/paste is not your original work could be seen as plagiarism.

If you are actually the original author, please do reply to let us know!

Thank You!

Good thoughts

Congratulations @salek11! You have received a personal award!

2 Years on Steemit
Click on the badge to view your Board of Honor.

Do not miss the last post from @steemitboard:

SteemitBoard knock out by hardfork

Support SteemitBoard's project! Vote for its witness and get one more award!

Congratulations @salek11! You received a personal award!

Happy Birthday! - You are on the Steem blockchain for 3 years!

You can view your badges on your Steem Board and compare to others on the Steem Ranking

Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness to get one more award and increased upvotes!