The Daily Telegraph

Buy this income fund that promises at least 15 years of rising dividends

BBGI Global Infrastruc­ture yields 6pc and is trading at a 12pc discount

- GAVIN LUMSDEN QUESTOR TRUST BARGAINS Read Questor’s rules of investment before you follow our tips: telegraph. co.uk/go/questorrul­es BBGI

The big share price falls in infrastruc­ture funds have persuaded Questor to add to our recommenda­tions in a sector once prized for reliable dividends.

Shares in BBGI Global Infrastruc­ture, a Luxembourg investment company listed in London, offer an attractive, government-backed 6pc yield and the potential for capital growth as they languish 12pc below the value of the fund’s assets. Like our previous tips of Internatio­nal Public Partnershi­ps (INPP) and HICL Infrastruc­ture, BBGI shares tumbled in response to rapidly rising interest rates that made cash and government bonds look better for investors seeking income.

Launched in 2011, BBGI is a £1bn fund running toll bridges, roads and facilities at schools, hospitals and prisons in G7 countries on which it earns inflation-linked revenues on long-term contracts. From a 100p price at float, the shares peaked at 178.8p in July 2022 but have fallen to 130p. That’s nearly 12pc below the portfolio’s underlying net asset value (NAV) of 147.8p per share as at Dec 31. With the Bank of England poised to start cutting Bank Rate from 5.25pc this summer, the tide could be about to turn for BBGI and the other core infrastruc­ture funds.

Questor believes BBGI makes a compelling addition as the least risky fund in its sector. Unlike HICL and INPP, which over the years have added some economical­ly exposed assets, such as train lines, or regulated utilities such as water companies, BBGI has stuck to its knitting. The payments BBGI gets on its 56 social infrastruc­ture projects in the UK, North America, Australia and Europe, are entirely availabili­ty based.

This means it only has to ensure the facilities are operating to be paid and does not have to worry whether people are using them or if a regulator will change how much money it can make.

The advantage of this focused approach is an impressive consistenc­y in income generation on top of solid growth. While the fund suffered its first annual fall in net asset value last year – a small decline of 1.4pc due to the impact of higher interest rates – its twice-yearly dividends have grown in each of the past 13 years, with the annual payouts covered by income since 2013.

Shareholde­rs who bought in BBGI’S listing 13 years ago have received total dividends of 75.7p per share, with last year’s distributi­on raised 6pc to 7.93p in line with its target and covered 1.4 times by earnings. In annual results last week, it also lifted this year’s dividend target by 6pc to 8.40p with a further 2pc rise to 8.57p pencilled in for 2025.

The combinatio­n of capital growth and income means BBGI has generated a total return of 170.8pc on its assets since launch, equivalent to 8.6pc a year. However, the share price upset of the past two years means shareholde­rs have

‘A pairing of capital growth and income means BBGI has made a total return of 170.8pc on its assets since launch’

received only 141.1pc on their stakes, or 7.6pc a year.

Hopefully, the shareholde­r return should improve as investors reappraise the value of BBGI’S income stream. As interest rates fall, the discount, or gap to NAV, narrows or even closes. Such is the reliabilit­y of its revenues, it forecast that without further acquisitio­ns the portfolio could increase dividends for the next 15 years before starting to wind down and repay capital to shareholde­rs.

It is not BBGI’S plan to stand still, however. Cash from the portfolio means the company can fund new investment­s without having to raise money from shareholde­rs. Last year the trust repaid the £64.4m it borrowed to buy its last two new assets in 2022, a project to upgrade the John Hart Generating Station in Vancouver and the A7 Motorway in Germany.

That gives the company room to make further acquisitio­ns. Chief executive Duncan Ball said he was seeing “lots of opportunit­ies” to invest but would balance these against buying back some of the company’s shares. Buybacks can be a good way of lifting returns for shareholde­rs when they are purchased on cheap discounts.

While BBGI yields slightly less than HICL and INPP, its income looks attractive compared with government bonds on 4.5pc. BBGI’S discount is also narrower than its two rivals but still offers the potential for strong share price recovery if interest rates fall and enhance the appeal of its payouts.

There is a danger of interest rates remaining higher for longer if inflation proves stubborn. That need not be bad news for BBGI, which would earn more interest on its cash. It would see its annual return rise by 0.5pc for every 1pc rise in inflation above forecast.

This is a high quality, inflation-linked income fund that invests shareholde­r capital wisely.

Questor says: buy

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