Some light in the dividend tunnel

A recent report on UK dividend payments suggests the worst of the cuts may be over.

First, the bad news:

  • In the third quarter of 2020, total (regular and special) dividend payments from UK companies were 49.1% lower than in the corresponding quarter in 2019.
  • Two thirds of UK companies either cut or cancelled their dividends in the quarter.
  • One-off special dividends fell by no less than 90% year-on-year in Q3.
  • Across 2020 as a whole, the fall in total dividends will be around 45%, according to an estimate from Link Asset Services, a leading company registrar.

If you hold UK equity funds – particularly UK equity income funds – or own shares directly, you will be lucky not to have felt the impact of such unprecedented dividend cuts. As the graph shows, the fall in payouts has been much greater than in the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis.

Now, a little good news:

  • The fall in the third quarter was less than the second quarter, when the overall drop was 57.2%.
  • Similarly, the proportion of companies cutting or cancelling dividends was also higher in Q2, at three quarters.
  • Special dividends were unusually high in the third quarter of 2019 – nearly quadruple the amount of Q3 2018 – which distorts the latest comparison.

The pandemic has been going on long enough for any company that needed (or, in some cases, wanted) to cut or cull its dividends to have done so. Some companies, such as BP and Shell, have taken the opportunity to ‘rebase’ their dividends, a subtle way of saying that the new, lower level is the base for future payments. A growing number of companies that suspended dividends have resumed payments or promised to do so.

Source: Link Asset Services

The value of your investment and the income from it can go down as well as up and you may not get back the full amount you invested. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. Investing in shares should be regarded as a long-term investment and should fit in with your overall attitude to risk and financial circumstances.

Related Blogs

View all Blogs

Economic Review – February 2021

UK economy poised for recovery Although the latest gross domestic product (GDP) statistics revealed the UK suffered a record slump in 2020, there are now growing hopes the economy is on the cusp of recovery. Figures published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), showed the UK endured a record fall in output last year […]

Read more

First-time buyer deposits rise after Covid-19 property boom

The average deposit paid by first-time homebuyers jumped by £10,000 in 2020. When the pandemic took hold in the first half of last year, it looked as if the housing market was headed for a fall, if not something more dramatic. There were problems about viewing properties, arranging surveys, organising removals – you name it, […]

Read more

Is your retirement income sustainable?

It is more than likely that any expenditure you had planned for 2020, to make the most of your retirement, will have been affected by lockdown and travel restrictions, possibly meaning that you don’t need to take as much from your pension pot as you had originally thought. Now is an ideal time to review […]

Read more
TOMD SERVER