FTSE 100 dividends paid and restored now exceed value of cuts since the pandemic began

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Lily James, Carey Mulligan and Ralph Fiennes may be gripping the nation in the Netflix film The Dig, but it is treasure of a different kind that is keeping investors interested in the UK stock market, after a bumper month for dividend payments in February.

Payment declarations came to £14.6 billion, while a further £5.2 billion worth of dividends were restored, against just £2.7 billion of cuts. A further three firms – Hays, Avingtrans and Beazley – also declared their intention to restore dividends shortly, to further boost the income received by investors in the UK stock market.

The aggregate of dividends paid and restored has also now exceeded the value of those cut or cancelled over the past 12 months, to suggest that companies really do feel the worst may be behind us, in terms of the pandemic and the economic downturn.

  UK dividend payments
£ million
UK dividend payments
£ million
UK dividend payments
£ million
UK dividend payments
£ million
  CUT KEPT RESTORED Kept + restored
Mar-20 15,217 1,020 0 1,020
Apr-20 10,967 8,423 0 8,423
May-20 5,012 3,674 0 3,674
Jun-20 638 1,967 0 1,967
Jul-20 5,216 6,791 1,105 7,896
Aug-20 4,148 3,294 1,314 4,608
Sep-20 1,191 582 605 1,187
Oct-20 4,243 2,011 133 2,144
Nov-20 776 4,793 609 5,402
Dec-20 412 240 155 395
Jan-21 27 1,141 91 1,232
Feb-21 2,712 14,590 5,205 19,795
         
2020 47,820 32,795 3,921 36,716
2021 to date 2,739 15,731 5,296 21,027
Total 50,559 48,526 9,217 57,743

Source: Company accounts

Share buyback activity picked up, too, putting a little more cash in investors’ pockets. A dozen companies announced new buybacks schemes in February, with a value of almost £1.5 billion – and Berkeley and Rightmove have yet to quantify the amount of stock that they intend to purchase.

While there is no denying that the economic backdrop is a very difficult one, income-seekers have at least passed a key test this month, since BP and Shell paid out dividends that were lower than those of a year ago. That weighed heavily and the oil majors represented more than 90% of February’s total dividend reduction between them, with Evraz the only other FTSE 100 member to prune back its distribution, on a year-on-year basis.

The good news is that Shell cut last April and BP last August, so the base for comparison gets easier for the next quarter or two, before the bar starts to rise once more.

The miners led the charge, with big increases in pay-outs in February at BHP, Anglo American and Rio Tinto. Rio also declared a special dividend.

All of the Big Five banks returned to the dividend list, too. However, only HSBC exceeded expectations with its $0.15-a-share payments and NatWest, Barclays and Standard Chartered all undershot analysts’ forecasts.

As a result, it looks like the miners became the single-biggest dividend paying sector within the FTSE 100 in 2020. Polymetal, Fresnillo and Antofagasta’s dividend declarations for 2020 will have a say but it is the diggers who really are unearthing the treasure now for investors in UK equities, especially as the current surge in raw material and metals prices bodes well for their 2021 payments, too.

  Dividends (£m) 2020E Dividends (£m) 2021E % of FTSE 100 total 2020E % of FTSE 100 total 2021E Dividend yield (%) 2020E Dividend yield (% )2021E
Banks 3,327 7,657 5.3% 10.4% 2.0% 4.6%
Insurers 3,850 3,958 6.2% 5.4% 4.2% 4.3%
Other financials 2,273 2,361 3.6% 3.2% 2.0% 2.0%
Support services 1,462 1,541 2.3% 2.1% 1.6% 1.7%
Mining 9,822 13,709 15.8% 18.6% 4.4% 6.1%
Food Producers 3,859 4,361 6.2% 5.9% 3.2% 3.6%
Food Retailers 1,255 1,111 2.0% 1.5% 2.3% 2.1%
General Retailers 249 539 0.4% 0.7% 0.8% 1.8%
Consumer Staples 8,015 8,362 12.9% 11.3% 5.2% 5.4%
Technology 420 513 0.7% 0.7% 0.9% 1.1%
Telecoms 2,163 2,955 3.5% 4.0% 4.5% 6.2%
Travel & Leisure 46 616 0.1% 0.8% 0.1% 0.7%
Real Estate 568 720 0.9% 1.0% 2.8% 3.5%
Oil & Gas 8,597 7,432 13.8% 10.1% 5.5% 4.7%
Pharma / Healthcare 7,047 7,154 11.3% 9.7% 3.9% 4.0%
Media 1,321 1,711 2.1% 2.3% 2.3% 3.0%
Utilities 3,334 3,409 5.4% 4.6% 5.3% 5.4%
Industrials 2,041 2,123 3.3% 2.9% 2.4% 2.5%
Construction & Mats 1,323 2,161 2.1% 2.9% 2.2% 3.6%
Personal / Household 1,315 1,387 2.1% 1.9% 2.5% 2.7%
FTSE 100 62,286 73,779 100.0% 100.0% 3.3% 3.9%

Source: Company accounts, analysts’ consensus forecasts, Marketscreener, Sharecast

The banks are a key variable and they could yet disappoint, especially if the economic recovery proves to be weak, low interest rates weigh on loan books’ net interest margins, the lenders have to take further substantial provisions or the regulator intervenes once more.

The banks are still expected to be a key driver of dividend growth in the FTSE 100, but if they stumble then the miners might have to take up the slack. These two sectors underpin consensus analysts’ forecasts of a 19% increase in FTSE 100 dividends to £73.8 billion in 2020, enough for a dividend yield of almost 4%, and they above all others must be watched carefully by income seekers this year.

  Percentage of FTSE 100 dividends paid 2020 E Percentage of FTSE 100 dividends paid 2021 E     Percentage of FTSE 100 dividend growth 2020 E Percentage of FTSE 100 dividend growth 2021 E
Consumer Staples 21% 19%   Financials (20%) 39%
Financials 15% 19%   Mining (5%) 34%
Mining 16% 19%   Consumer Discretionary (11%) 10%
Oil & Gas 14% 10%   Industrial goods & services 8% 9%
Health Care 11% 10%   Consumer Staples 10% 8%
Industrial goods & services 8% 8%   Telecoms (5%) 7%
Consumer Discretionary 5% 5%   Real estate 0% 1%
Utilities 5% 5%   Health Care (1%) 1%
Telecoms 3% 4%   Technology 0% 1%
Real estate 1% 1%   Utilities 1% 1%
Technology 1% 1%   Oil & Gas (78%) (10%)

Source: Company accounts, analysts’ consensus forecasts, Marketscreener, Sharecast

These articles are for information purposes only and are not a personal recommendation or advice.


russmould's picture
Written by:
Russ Mould

Russ Mould has 28 years' experience of the capital markets. He started at Scottish Equitable in 1991 as a fund manager and in 1993 he joined SG Warburg, now part of UBS investment bank, where he worked as equity analyst covering the technology sector for 12 years. Russ joined Shares in November 2005 as technology correspondent and became Editor of the magazine in July 2008. Following the acquisition of Shares' parent company, MSM Media by AJ Bell Group, he was appointed AJ Bell’s Investment Director in summer 2013.