Are These The Five Best Retirement Shares In The FTSE?

Published in Investing on 5 December 2012

I pick five more top choices in my search for the best FTSE 100 retirement shares.

The last five years have been tough for those in retirement. Portfolio valuations have been hammered and annuity rates have plunged. There's no sign of things improving anytime soon, either, as the eurozone and the UK economy look set to muddle through at best for some years to come.

A great way of protecting yourself from the downturn, however, is by building your retirement fund with shares of large, well-run companies that should grow their earnings steadily over the coming decades. Over time, such investments ought to result in rising dividends and inflation-beating capital growth.

In this series, I'm tracking down the UK large-caps that have the potential to beat the FTSE 100 (UKX) over the long term and support a lower-risk income-generating retirement fund (you can see all of the companies I've covered so far on this page).

Over the last few weeks, I've looked at fifteen shares and in this article I'm going to examine the five top-scoring shares so far -- Pearson (LSE: PSON), Associated British Foods (LSE: ABF), Meggitt (LSE: MGGT), Petrofac (LSE: PFC) and Johnson Matthey (LSE: JMAT).

First, let's take a look at how each of them scored against my five key retirement share criteria:

CriteriaPearsonMeggittAssociated British FoodsPetrofacJohnson Matthey
Longevity4/55/54/53/55/5
Performance vs. FTSE4/54/54/54/54/5
Financial strength4/54/54/55/54/5
EPS growth3/53/54/55/54/5
Dividend growth5/54/54/54/54/5
Total20/2520/2520/2521/2521/25

Pearson

Pearson may be best known to investors as the owner of the Financial Times, but although the FT Group business is quite profitable, it only contributes around 12% of profits to Pearson's business -- 75% of profits come from its educational publishing business, with the remainder coming from the Penguin publishing business. There's regular speculation that Pearson might sell the FT Group, but from an investors point of view, its educational business and the success of the new joint venture between Penguin and Random House are more important.

As a retirement share, Pearson has performed well in the past, increasing its dividend every year for at least a decade, meaning that investors who bought ten years ago have seen their income almost double in that time.

Meggitt

I was quite impressed with engineer Meggitt's potential as a retirement share. It currently sits on a fairly modest price to earnings ratio (P/E) of 12.1 and offers a 2.7% dividend yield. While this level of income is below the FTSE 100 average of 3.3%, the likelihood of regular dividend increases look high and the company's payout ratio of around 30% of earnings per share should ensure that the dividend remains sustainable without restricting capital investment.

The majority of Meggitt's revenue comes from the civil aerospace and defence sectors, with around 10% coming from the energy industry. I quite liked this broad mixture of exposure, which should enable the company to ride out down-cycles in individual sectors without too much pain.

Associated British Foods

Associated British Foods makes its money from three distinct businesses: a portfolio of consumer food brands including Ovaltine and Twinings, its wholesale ingredients business, which is built around British Sugar, and from budget clothes retailer Primark, which it owns.

This diverse business proves that conglomerates can work, and ABF has had a good recession, making it extremely popular with investors. The firm has increased its dividend every year since at least 1993, and its share price has risen by 31% this year alone. As a result, ABF's shares now boast a P/E of 17 and yield just 1.9%, but they could be a great addition to a retirement portfolio should the price dip for any reason.

Petrofac

As I mentioned in my original review, Petrofac has proved the worth of making money by providing essential services to speculators, rather than speculating yourself. It's an oil services firm whose share price has risen by 613% over the last ten years and which currently has $500m in net cash and a $9.4 billion backlog of orders. Although there are some signs that order growth is flattening, this is unlikely to become material unless the price of oil falls dramatically -- yesterday, the company announced two new contracts worth $1.4 billion in Saudi Arabia.

From a retirement investing perspective, Petrofac provides an alternative way of gaining exposure to the oil sector. However, it currently trades on a much higher P/E than oil supermajors like BP and offers around half the dividend yield -- so it could be some years before Petrofac can offer the kind of income available from the big producers.

Johnson Matthey

Like ABF, Johnson Matthey offers a slightly below-average dividend yield but has an outstanding record of dividend increases -- something that is very important if you want your retirement income to keep pace with inflation. The firm is a chemicals business and one of the world's largest platinum refiners. After hitting record highs earlier this year, Johnson Matthey's share price has subsided somewhat and the company now trades on a P/E of 15.3 and offers a yield of 2.3% -- both of which are slightly below average for the FTSE 100.

Finding good quality businesses with reliable dividend growth histories is a vital part of retirement investing and Johnson Matthey looks like a good example to me. It could well be worth accepting its lower yield now, in order to gain access to its rising dividend yield on cost over the longer term.

Learn from the best

Doing your own research is important, but another good way of identifying great dividend-paying shares is to study the choices of successful professional investors. One of the most successful income investors currently working in the City is fund manager Neil Woodford, who had £21bn of private investors' funds under management at the end of October 2012 -- more than any other City manager.

Mr Woodford's track record is truly outstanding. His High Income fund grew by a staggering 342% in the 15 years to 31 October 2012, during which time the FTSE All-Share index only managed a gain of 125%.

You can learn about all eight of Neil Woodford's top holdings and see how he generates such fantastic profits in this free Motley Fool report. Many of Mr Woodford's choices look like excellent retirement shares to me and the report explains how he chose some of his biggest holdings.

This report is completely free and I strongly recommend you download"8 Shares Held By Britain's Super Investor" today, as it is available for a limited time only.

> Roland does not own shares in any of the companies mentioned in this article.

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Comments

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TellyHostage 05 Dec 2012 , 11:08pm

I run retirement portfolios for my parents. I'm looking for decent dividends, preferably rising, but with a reasonable hope of growth too (my parents need to play catch-up!).

So the following may be slightly on the risky side for most people's idea of retirement shares, but I do balance the portfolios with individual bonds, and the following have performed well over the last 2/3 years. Here are my top 5:

1. Dignity (slow, steady, reliable growth) +20%
2. Catlin (chunky div) +20
3. Unilever (growth, div growth, global) +20
4. Aviva (lovely div and undervalued) +9%
5. Union Pacific (growth and rising div) +5%

And I'd give a mention to Diageo (+30%) too.

So they're what's worked for my parents over the last few years; wish I'd bought most of them for myself..!

Anyone care to comment or share..?

TH

goodlifer 07 Dec 2012 , 9:11am

Hi TellyHostage,

I'm trying to do much the same for my fortyish son, who finds this whole business about as interesting as I did when I was his age.
.
In my hopelessly arrogant opinion bonds are a complete dead loss, so the big idea is to build up a portfolio of 15-30 blue or bluish chips, which he can fool about with if he wishes or - more likely - make like Mr Bland's Doris and just enjoy the spending of the dividends,

Aviva's the only one of yours I currently hold.
I once bought Unilever when they were good and cheap but sold them, perhaps wrongly, at a reasonable profit, and they're still a bit pricey for me.
I like the look of Dignity, but they too normally cost more than I'm prepared to pay.

At present I'm happy to hold AZN, AV,BARC,BLT,BP.CNA,MKS,NG, RDSB,RB,RIO,RSA,SBRY,SSE,TSCO,VOD and one small cap, SHRS.
Less happy - mainly because I paid too much for them - about CWC,EMG, and HFD.
I'm thinking of GSK,RSN,STAN or possibly GLEN next time I can afford to buy.
Or maybe adding to what we've got already.

Good luck!

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