Why Banco Santander SA, RSA Insurance Group plc And N Brown Group plc Are Irresistible Dividend Stars

Royston Wild explains why income chasers should fill up on Banco Santander SA (LON: BNC), RSA Insurance Group plc (LON: RSA) and N Brown Group plc (LON: BWNG).

| More on:

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

Today I am looking at three London-listed stars poised to deliver spectacular dividend growth.

Banco Santander

Spanish banking colossus Santander (LSE: BNC) shocked the market back in January when it took the hammer to its ultra-generous dividend policy in order to bolster its capital reserves. Combined with introducing a colossal €7.5bn rights issue, the bank advised that it would limit the full-year payout for 2015 to just 20 euro cents per share, a huge reduction from dividends around 60 cents during the past five years.

Although share prices have still to recoup their losses since January’s statement, I believe that Santander remains a highly-attractive stock selection, particularly now that new chairperson Ana Botín’s cash-building exercise has calmed doubts over the bank’s financial robustness.

With the firm expanding its footprint and product ranges in the promising territories of Latin America — Santander already generates 38% of all profits from the region, and half of those from Brazil alone — and Santander enjoying the fruits of a recovering UK economy, I expect dividends to march higher again in line with earnings.

And investors should note that even a dividend of 20 cents for this year creates a handy yield of 3%. With the bottom line expected to keep on expanding — growth of 14% and 13% is predicted for 2015 and 2016 respectively — I fully expect dividends to move back towards lip-smacking levels sooner rather than later.

RSA Insurance Group

Like Santander, RSA Insurance (LSE: RSA) has fallen out of favour with income hunters in recent times as pressure on the balance sheet has mounted. Indeed, the company elected to cease paying dividends at all last February and completed a mammoth £773m cash call a few months later.

But with profits back on the march again, costs coming down and a swathe of divestments having been completed, RSA Insurance felt confident enough to get payments moving again with a final dividend of 2p per share for 2014.

With the firm’s payout policy now back in full flow, the City predicts RSA Insurance will provide a total dividend of 13.2p for 2015, producing a decent yield of 3%. And this is anticipated to rise to 15.3p the following year, catapulting the yield to a much-improved 3.5%. I fully expect shareholder rewards to keep in rising at a heady rate in the coming years as revenues from the insurer’s streamlined operations across UK and Ireland, Scandinavia, Canada and Latin America pick up.

N Brown Group

In the face of persistent earnings woes, internet and catalogue retailer N Brown (LSE: BWNG) is expected to disappoint its own shareholders in the coming weeks. Indeed, the business — which operates the Jacomo and Simply Be brands amongst others — is expected to cut the dividend for the year concluding February 2015 to 13.7p per share, down from 14.23p in 2014.

N Brown has had to invest vast sums to transform itself from a ‘mail order’ business to a digital-orientated one, while steady sales decline in recent quarters — caused by huge competition and unfavourable weather conditions — has also smacked the business. But with turnover having bounced 3.6% higher during December-February, and N Brown’s transformation plan leaving it better prepared to accommodate surging e-commerce in the future, things are looking up for the Manchester-based firm.

Consequently the number crunchers expect both earnings and dividends to surge again from this year onwards, and a payment of 14p is currently slated for fiscal 2016, creating a hefty yield of 4.2%. And a further chunky hike in the following year, to 14.9p, propels the yield to an even-better 4.5%.

Royston Wild has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. We Fools don't all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

More on Investing Articles

Sunrise over Earth
Investing Articles

Meet the ex-penny share up 109% that has topped Rolls-Royce and Nvidia in 2025

The share price of this investment trust has gone from pennies to above £1 over the past couple of years.…

Read more »

House models and one with REIT - standing for real estate investment trust - written on it.
Investing Articles

1 of the FTSE 100’s most reliable dividend stocks for me to buy now?

With most dividend stocks with 6.5% yields, there's a problem with the underlying business. But LondonMetric Property is a rare…

Read more »

Investing Articles

Is 2026 the year to consider buying oil stocks?

The time to buy cyclical stocks is when they're out of fashion with investors. And that looks to be the…

Read more »

ISA coins
Investing Articles

3 reasons I’m skipping a Cash ISA in 2026

Putting money into a Cash ISA can feel safe. But in 2026 and beyond, that comfort could come at a…

Read more »

US Stock

I asked ChatGPT if the Tesla share price could outperform Nvidia in 2026, with this result!

Jon Smith considers the performance of the Tesla share price against Nvidia stock and compares his view for next year…

Read more »

Investing Articles

Greggs: is this FTSE 250 stock about to crash again in 2026?

After this FTSE 250 stock crashed in 2025, our writer wonders if it will do the same in 2026. Or…

Read more »

Investing Articles

7%+ yields! Here are 3 major UK dividend share forecasts for 2026 and beyond

Mark Hartley checks forecasts and considers the long-term passive income potential of three of the UK's most popular dividend shares.

Read more »

Hand is turning a dice and changes the direction of an arrow symbolizing that the value of an ETF (Exchange Traded Fund) is going up (or vice versa)
Investing Articles

2 top ETFs to consider for an ISA in 2026

Here are two very different ETFs -- one set to ride the global robotics boom, the other offering a juicy…

Read more »