History shows that owning a wide range of dividend stocks, investment trusts and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) can be an effective method of making passive income over time. Doing so reduces the impact of dividend trouble among one or two shares on overall shareholder returns.
I think the following mini-portfolio — offering exposure to a total of 346 companies — could be a great way to target a large, reliable and growing second income over time. Here’s why I think they’re worth serious consideration.
FTSE 100 company M&G‘s (LSE:MNG) been lifting dividends consistently since it was spun off from Prudential in 2019. Though profits have been up and down due to rising interest rates and weak economic growth, payouts have kept rising thanks to the firm’s robust balance sheet.
With a Solvency II ratio of 223%, it looks in good shape to keep this record going.
Recent share price strength has pulled its dividend yield away from double-digit percentage territory. But at 8.1%, it still packs the third-largest yield on the Footsie today.
This is also more than double the blue-chip index’s broader average of 3.4%.
M&G’s share price could reverse if economic conditions worsen. But the long-term outlook here is robust, in my opinion, as an ageing population drives demand for its investment and retirement products.
At 8.8%, the forward yield on the iShares World Equity High Income ETF (LSE:WINC) also leaves the FTSE 100’s corresponding average in the dust. And with holdings in 344 different companies, it’s capital allocation effectively protects investor returns if a handful of shares deliver disappointing dividends.
As the chart above shows, this fund invests in a wide range of sectors, reducing risk and providing a smooth return across the economic cycle. It also holds money in US goverment bonds and cash for added robustness.
What’s more, as its name implies, the product invests in shares from across the globe, including the US (67.8% of the portfolio), Japan (6.9%), France (2.9%) and the UK (2.2%).
This high weighting of US shares could impact performance if investors rotate away from North America. But I think it balances risk and return pretty effectively.
Primary Health Properties (LSE:PHP) is a real estate investment trust (REIT) which can make it ideal for dividend income. Sector rules dictate that a minimum of 90% of annual rental profits must be paid out in cash to investors.
This REIT has specifically proven one of the best dividend-paying REITs in recent decades. Shareholder rewards have risen each year since the mid-1990s.