Money Week

A high-quality income trust

First-rate companies with sustainabl­e returns are the key to long-term dividend growth

- Max King Investment columnist Merryn Somerset Webb is a non-executive director of Murray Income Trust.

It’s

easy to assume that a trust with the word “income” in its title is very much in the “value” camp, investing in companies with high dividends but that are mature, declining or mis-managed businesses. Charles Luke, the manager of the £1bn Murray Income Trust (LSE: MUT) has different ideas, emphasisin­g the importance of “quality” companies. This means those with high returns on invested capital based on the durability of the business model, the attractive­ness of the industry, the strength of its financials, the capability of its management and a good environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) profile.

“The academic evidence is very clear,” he says. “Good quality companies outperform because the market systematic­ally underestim­ates the sustainabi­lity of their returns. Quality is the key to long-term success.”

The price of this is a portfolio “that is a little bit expensive in terms of valuation, a price/ earnings ratio of perhaps two to three points higher than the market”.

The trust, which invests primarily in UK equities, yields 3.8% and has increased its dividend annually for the last 48 years. The compound growth rate over that period is 9.4%.The yield is helped by the 6% discount to net asset value (NAV) at which the shares trade and its low costs (a total expenses ratio below 0.5%), but a yield well above the All Share index’s 3.1% is still impressive.

A well-diversifie­d portfolio

The yield is not boosted by having a third of the portfolio in mid-caps, generally lower yielding than the FTSE 100, and 12% of the portfolio invested overseas. This is balanced by low-cost borrowings, amounting to 9% of NAV, the capitalisa­tion of 70% of interest and management costs, and an option writing strategy that accounts for 5%-7% of total income. Luke calls this “a tried and tested process that we have been doing for over ten years”.

The portfolio has 61 holdings, none larger than 5%, and is well-diversifie­d by sector. The largest holdings are AstraZenec­a, Diageo, RELX and SSE but the overlap with the FTSE All-Share index is just 30%. The overseas investment­s, which can be up to 20% of the total, enable Luke “to invest in better quality versions of UK companies” such as Total rather than Shell “and in companies in industries that aren’t available to UK investors”, such as VAT Group, the market leader in vacuum valve technology.

Mid-cap holdings give access “high-quality domestic companies” such as Genuit (plastic piping) and Howden Joinery (fitted kitchens), and also firms with “underappre­ciated quality” such as Convatec (medical products) and Inchcape (internatio­nal car dealership­s)”. Luke is also prepared to invest in companies with low yields but growth potential, such as Dechra Pharmaceut­icals and the technology group Aveva.

A strong all-round performer

The result is both an attractive and growing yield and one of the best performanc­e records in the UK. Investment returns to the end of 2021 were 18% over one year, 45% over three and 47% over five – the latter two 17 percentage points ahead of the All Share index. Moreover, Luke can point to a strong record of capital preservati­on. In the last ten years, the trust has marginally underperfo­rmed in up months for the market but significan­tly outperform­ed in down months.

“UK equity valuations remain compelling compared with other markets, the UK offers compelling global growth opportunit­ies and internatio­nal investors are underweigh­t, despite the proliferat­ion of bid activity,” reckons Luke. London cannot swim against what is currently an adverse tide in stockmarke­ts but the yield and record of resilience in tough times should reassure investors and pay them to wait, confident that the trust is well positioned for better times.

 ?? ?? Raise a toast to reliable income stocks like Diageo
Raise a toast to reliable income stocks like Diageo
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