One UK share has baffled me for some time. Which is a worry, since I own it. On the face of it, this top FTSE 100 dividend income stock looks like a brilliant long-term buy-and-hold, yet its shares have failed to fulfill their apparently huge potential
The stock in question is insurer and closed-book pension provider Phoenix Group Holdings (LSE: PHNX). Right now, it has a trailing yield of a quite stunning 10.49%. On the FTSE 100, only Vodafone Group pays more (and its payout is about to be slashed in half).
The Phoenix dividend always looked a little bit too good to be true but I decided it really was affordable, and the board seemed confident too. I wouldn’t have bought the shares otherwise.
This stock is falling fast
Phoenix shares were dirt cheap when I bought them and remain so today, trading at 6.19 times earnings. I bought hoping they would recover but instead they keep sliding. They’re down 27.95% over five years, and 10.34% over the last year.
It’s down 4.5% in early trading this morning, making this the biggest faller on the FTSE 100. This follows a worrying report in yesterday’s Sunday Times that Phoenix is setting aside £70m to cut fees as it battles to meet the Financial Conduct Authority’s new consumer duty requirements. That’s on top of the £68m it has already spent removing exit fees.
The new consumer duty regime came into force for most of the financial services industry last July, and caused havoc at FTSE 100-listed advisory firm St James’s Place, which was forced to scrap exit penalties and slash customer charges to comply.
It will apply to closed-book products from 31 July this year, and it’s a big deal for Phoenix, which has around £119bn of its total £269bn of assets in closed-book products.
It could be a FTSE 100 flop
We’ll learn more when full year results are published on Friday 22 March, but the report has added a huge new layer of uncertainty for investors like me.
The stakes are high too. The St James’s Place share price has been hammered, crashing 65% over the past 12 months. If Phoenix suffers anything like that, the high yield will not compensate. Plus the dividend may be on the line. St James’s Place slashed its dividend in half and cut share buybacks too.
I won’t be selling my stake in Phoenix. I am bracing myself for a bumpy ride though, and trying to learn lessons. Obviously, investors cannot foresee every piece of bad news, but I hadn’t read about the consumer duty issue until today. Yet I sensed something was up. The stock really should have been doing better.
Should I take this opportunity to buy more? That would be a punt, given that I don’t know what we can expect on Friday. I’ll hold what I’ve got and take any punishment on the chin. Next time I see something that looks too good to be true, I’ll dig a lot deeper.
The post 10.5% yield but down 28%! Should I buy more of this dirt-cheap UK share? appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.
We think earning passive income has never been easier
Do you like the idea of dividend income?
The prospect of investing in a company just once, then sitting back and watching as it potentially pays a dividend out over and over?
If you’re excited by the thought of regular passive income payments, as well as the potential for significant growth on your initial investment…
Then we think you’ll want to see this report inside Motley Fool Share Advisor — ‘5 Essential Stocks For Passive Income Seekers’.
What’s more, today we’re giving away one of these stock picks, absolutely free!
Get your free passive income stock pick
setButtonColorDefaults(“#5FA85D”, ‘background’, ‘#5FA85D’);
setButtonColorDefaults(“#43A24A”, ‘border-color’, ‘#43A24A’);
setButtonColorDefaults(“#FFFFFF”, ‘color’, ‘#FFFFFF’);
})()
More reading
Down 16%! Time for me to buy more of this 10%-yielding FTSE 100 hidden gem?
I’d buy 10 shares a week of this FTSE 100 stock to target a £1,000 annual passive income
3 tempting high-yielding passive income stocks I like — but are they shrewd buys?
3 FTSE 100 stocks I want to buy for a £1,270 passive income!
These 3 stocks pay me huge passive income. But is there a catch?
Harvey Jones has positions in Phoenix Group Plc. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Vodafone Group Public. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.