42 Years Of Small-Cap Dividends

Published in Company Comment on 19 June 2012

Strong overseas exposure adds to the appeal of this share.

Investing in smaller companies requires a certain level of dedication. Careful research and monitoring of your selections is needed to make sure they stay on track.

Given this, what would you say to investing in a £230m small cap that's been in business since 1889 and has increased its dividend every year for the last 42 years?

Trust me

The company concerned is, of course, an investment trust -- one of the most Foolish ways of investing in shares.

F&C Global Smaller Companies (LSE: FCS) was founded in 1889 and is now part of the F&C Asset Management (LSE: FCAM) stable of investment trusts and funds. Impressively, despite its focus on smaller companies, it is one of just eight investment trusts that have increased their dividends every year for at least 40 years.

Over the last 10 years, F&C Global Smaller Companies has comfortably outperformed its benchmark, delivering an annualised trailing return of 12.32%, against 8.18% for its benchmark. It has also strongly outperformed the FTSE 100 (UKX), which has provided a total return of just 4.1% per year over the last 10 years.

New broom

The trust's performance has got even better since current manager Peter Ewins took over in 2011, although it's arguably too soon to say how much of the improvement is down to his management.

On the other hand, one fund manager who definitely can take full responsibility for his funds' growth is Neil Woodford, who many describe as the UK's answer to Warren Buffett. Woodford's High Income fund has grown by 347% over the last 15 years, compared with 42% for the FTSE All-Share Index, while the investment trust he manages -- Edinburgh Investment Trust (LSE: EDIN) -- gained 9.42% last year, against a fall of 3.46% in its benchmark.

Woodford invests in a mixture of big cap and smaller companies, and now manages more money for private investors than any other fund manager. You can find eight of his biggest current holdings in this free report, which I highly recommend.

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Global growth

F&C Global Smaller Companies claims to be the only investment trust specialising in smaller companies on a global basis. The trust's £250m of assets are allocated across the world:

  • UK: 29%
  • Europe: 10.8%
  • US: 39.8%
  • Japan: 7.8%
  • Rest of World: 12.6%

I particularly like the global aspect of the trust's investments, which provides attractive exposure to smaller growth companies all over the world and means that the Trust's investments are very unlikely to duplicate any of your individual shareholdings.

Another good year

The trust's global growth strategy seems to work well. It has just published its latest annual report, showing that it outperformed the relevant local index in every single one of its regions:

RegionPortfolio performance y/e 30 April 2012Local smaller companies index
UK4.3%0.0%
USA2.1%-1.7%
Continental Europe-7.8%-24.5%
Japan9.8%6.5%
Rest of World-1.2%-13.6% (Pacific ex. Japan)

-12.5% (Latin America)

Source: F&C Global Smaller Companies 2012 annual report

Dividends up

This year saw the Trust increase its dividend for the 42nd consecutive year. The total dividend for the last year is 5.63p, a 10.4% increase on the previous year. This equates to a yield of about 1%; not outstanding, but this is primarily a growth investment.

Cost-wise, F&C Global Smaller Companies is cheaper than most unit trusts. Ongoing Charges for the most recent year (this measure has replaced Total Expense Ratio) were 1.08%, a figure that puts most open-ended funds to shame.

Getting a discount

Shares in investment trusts can sometimes trade at hefty discounts to their underlying net asset value (NAV). This tends to reflect the degree of confidence the market has in the trust's future performance and the liquidity of its investments.

Trusts that invest in highly illiquid assets, such as forests and privately held companies, can suffer particularly badly in this respect, as their assets are hard to sell quickly without being discounted.

F&C Global Smaller Companies has kept its discount under control using share buybacks and its share price is within a whisker of the NAV. Investors who prefer to buy at a significant discount may have to wait -- but I think FCS represents decent value at full price and have added this to my own short list of investment trusts to watch.

Finally, don't forget to check out that free report I recommended -- it contains eight of dividend legend Neil Woodford's biggest holdings, and can be in your inbox in seconds.

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Further investment opportunities:

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

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Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

blackwhite 19 Jun 2012 , 5:06pm

Let me see if I understood this right. 42years of continuous raise in dividends has brought the yield this year to......1%?????

Who thinks up such headlines??

eccyman 19 Jun 2012 , 8:11pm

#blackwhite

to make a proper comparison you should consider todays dividend as a yield on price if you bought 40 years ago - think it'll be somewhat higher than 1%!

sopavest 20 Jun 2012 , 9:38am

@blackwhite
The attraction is the reliability of the income. It's not much fun depending on a fantastic 5% dividend for your retirement if it is halved one year and cancelled the next...

Investment trusts don't often payout the highest dividends (and those that do tend to have share prices at a premium to NAV), but they do pay out some of the most reliable dividends. This is one of their key attractions.

Plus, as eccyman points out, the yield on cost of the FCS dividend will be considerably higher than 1% if you bought it a couple of decades ago. It's a long-term investment.

I recently wrote about yield on cost appreciation here:

http://www.fool.co.uk/news/investing/2012/06/08/this-buffett-technique-will-increase-your-dividend.aspx

Cheers,

Roland (article author)

blackwhite 20 Jun 2012 , 9:56am

eccyman and sopavest, I get the point about YOC. I was only questioning the sensationalist headline about the 42 years of increase.. But nvm.

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