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The search for income

FEATURE: Nick Louth finds that by widening our investment horizon, we can secure high yields
June 24, 2010

The cataclysm at Britain's failed banks has devastated one of the principal sources of dividend yields, and now even BP, which provides a seventh of all FTSE 100 income, has been forced to cut its dividend. However, all is not lost for those prepared to widen their income-seeking horizon. Preference shares provide an extra cushion to protect income over ordinary shares and a recent fall in prices is giving some a tasty yield.

"There has been a recent fall in [preference share] prices in response to the eurozone crisis, which means some good yields are to be found," says professional bond investor Mark Taber, who runs a website for retail investors at fixedincomeinvestments.org.uk.

Because they are a hybrid of ordinary shares and debt, preference shares' prices have been hit recently by worries that affect the debt market, as well as concerns over corporate profitability and solvency. Yields on many of the more liquid issues now sit firmly in the 7-9 per cent range, with a few of the more obscure ones higher.

There have been some major changes in the preferred share market in the past year, with the ranks of Lloyds Banking Group issues being thinned considerably by an exchange offer that saw many issues replaced by contingently convertible (CoCo) issues.

The remaining issues have a kind of jumble sale feel to them. There are more than 85 preference shares listed in London, including tiny issues such as the £11,640 outstanding of Stewart & Wright 6 per cent 33 1/3p, right up to the £300m of Lloyds 9 per cent. For many smaller issues prices barely change and the thin market means that spreads are very wide. Even a casual glance will reveal that preference shares are still traded in many companies that were long subsumed into larger entities. Bristol & West, which has an 81/8 per cent coupon non-cumulative issue, is now part of Bank of Ireland. General Accident, part of Aviva, is there too, as is RSA Assurance, the former Royal & Sun Alliance and Northern Electric, which is owned by Mid-American Energy Holdings.

Should we care who owns these companies? Absolutely. It is an essential part of deciding what the risk-reward trade-off is for a particular issue. Preference shares were, like permanent interest-bearing shares (Pibs), never as safe as we used to think they were. That realisation came courtesy of the banking crisis, although of course those risks were always present. More than ever, we have to be sure that principal and interest are safe, or at least that we are being adequately rewarded for any risk of non-payment. We may be more worried now about company solvency, but that awareness actually makes us more safe.