Tuesday 15 October 2013

Royal Mail, dividend not so attractive now

One of the major attractions of buying Royal Mail shares was the prospect of a 6-7% dividend yield thanks to the Government pricing the company to sell. This would have been nice for the private investor if you could have got more than the 227 share limit, £750 worth at IPO, but once the issue was scaled back it became less attractive as a hold. I made the point in a post a few days ago that because of the small 227 share limit it might not be worth holding on to them given the 30-40% rise in price since then. If you want more, at a less attractive dividend yield, you now have to pay for it. Some in the city seem to feel the same way.
Investors who bought Royal Mail shares for the income should sell their stakes, experts say. Before trading began on Friday, the appeal of the shares had largely been in the likely dividend stream, which seemed attractive at the price. But with the shares having soared in value, the income now looks less appealing by comparison with the instant capital gain available if you sell.
With the shares priced at 475p at the end of trading yesterday the yield works out at about 4.3pc, net of basic-rate tax, which is deducted at source. Before trading began on Friday the yield stood at 6.1pc, representing 20p a share. The yield is now on a par with income stalwarts such as Tesco or Vodafone – which, unlike Royal Mail, do not face a union battle and massive restructuring.  
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/investing/10378410/Royal-Mail-sell-now-investors-urged-as-yield-falls-from-6.1pc-to-4.3pc.html

So, the euphoria around the Royal Mail IPO is beginning to wear off and as the price rises it is becoming less attractive as the market will inevitably focus on the issues facing the company going forward. There is also the question of whether a 4% dividend yield is attractive now when compared with other dividend payers, chances are that the risks are much higher going forward with Royal Mail. For the institutions however, a 3-4% dividend yield will still be attractive so I would expect them to continue to hoover up Royal Mail shares as the small investor sells off  their 227 shares. As an exercise in widening share ownership, if this was the Government's intention, it has largely failed. Most of the shares will end up, eventually, with institutions.

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