The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Profit from the tech boom on the west coast ...of Ireland

- Joanne Hart OUR SHARES GURU WITH THE GOLDEN TOUCH

MEDICAL technology is big business. Annual sales topped £350billion even before the coronaviru­s pandemic, and Ireland is one of the foremost players in the field.

Activity is concentrat­ed around Limerick, Galway and Athlone, which between them form the biggest medical technology hub in Europe.

Some firms are homegrown. Many more are multinatio­nals, choosing Ireland as their European hub because the workforce is highly educated, the government is welcoming and taxation is low.

These companies need decent, well-located places to work and

Yew Grove, a Dublin and AIMlisted business, provides them.

The shares are denominate­d in euros, priced at 88 cents (77p) and should increase in value over the next few years. Importantl­y, too, Yew Grove pays quarterly dividends and last week directors approved a 1.2 cent payment for the three months to March. Equivalent to 1.05p for UK investors, the dividend will be paid on May 6 to all shareholde­rs on the register by April 24.

Rising payments are likely during the year, with brokers expecting a total 2020 payout of at least 5.5 cents (4.8p), putting the stock on a yield of more than 6 per cent.

Yew Grove was founded in 2014 when chief executive Jonathan Laredo spotted a gap in the Irish market. A former banker with 27 years of investment experience, he saw that profession­al property firms in Ireland focused almost exclusivel­y on Dublin, even though half the multinatio­nals in the country are located outside the capital.

With a group of like-minded individual­s, Laredo started to buy commercial property in key locations around Ireland, creating a portfolio of assets before floating on the stock market in 2018.

Today, Yew Grove owns 27 properties, with a combined value of over £100million. From the start, Laredo and his team were determined to focus on high-quality tenants who were likely to stick around and could be relied upon to pay their rent.

The group has stayed true to that initial plan. Just over a quarter of Yew’s tenants are government bodies, such as the Electricit­y Supply Board. Most of the rest are major corporatio­ns, focused around medical technology, pharmaceut­icals and healthcare more broadly. And small businesses make up less than 5 per cent of the rent roll.

This spread of tenants gives Yew Grove an edge in the current crisis. In the three months to March 31, every tenant paid their rent on time and in full and in the quarter to June, the group expects to collect more than 95 per cent of the rent on time, with a similar percentage forecast for the rest of the year.

Looking ahead, Laredo is ambitious. Initially, he hoped to more than double Yew’s portfolio by the end of next year. That timetable will almost certainly be delayed, as Covid-19 has stopped property markets in their tracks, but the direction of travel remains the same.

There may even be some bargains on offer, once the virus has abated and, as the business grows, profits will rise and dividends increase.

Traded on: AIM Ticker: YEW Contact: ygreit.com or 00 353 1 485 3950

 ??  ?? GROWING MARKET: Jonathan Laredo, right, has expanded Yew Grove, buying property in key Irish locations
GROWING MARKET: Jonathan Laredo, right, has expanded Yew Grove, buying property in key Irish locations
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