Share your opinion and earn yourself a free Motley Fool premium report!

We are looking for Fools to join a 75 minute online independent market research forum on 15th / 16th December.

To find out more and express your interest please click here

£10k to invest? The FTSE 100 dividend share I bought and will never sell

For a FTSE 100 dividend share that keeps delivering year after year, the Legal & General share price is a steal for investors, says Tom Rodgers.

| 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.

We all have our FTSE 100 dividend share favourites, those buys that confirm our deep research, our insight into long-term value and those that shield us from wild bets and short-term thinking.

If I had £10,000 to spend on a solid FTSE 100 dividend share to boost my wealth, then Legal & General (LSE:LGEN) would be top of my list.

I say the insurance giant is one of the best placed to deliver great results long after these volatile markets are a distant memory.

This is especially true when you buy stocks using a Stocks and Shares ISA, because it’s a legal way to shield your gains from the taxman with a generous £20,000-a-year limit.

Great dividends

I love boring, profitable companies that keep delivering year after year.

A near-£1bn deal to insure the pension scheme of FTSE 250 sugar manufacturer Tate & Lyle announced in September is further evidence that LGEN has good long-term value.

In 2012 Tate & Lyle spent £347m with Legal & General on a similar scheme — that it has returned seven years later for a deal three times the size bodes well, in my opinion.

Offering a well-proportioned 6.2% yield, I think LGEN should form part of a solid selection of FTSE 100 dividend shares that grow your wealth while you sleep.

Also in this select group, by the way, are 7.2% yielding insurer Aviva, and for a little diversification, booming UK REIT Tritax Big Box, or British Land with (in my opinion) its undervalued price and 5% dividend.

Cover all bases

Dividend cover is a key metric in deciding which FTSE 100 dividend shares you can buy and forget. Since 2014, LGEN’s dividend cover has not dipped under 1.37 times earnings. The past two years have been some of the best yet, up at 1.8 or 1.9 times earnings.

This gives long-serving CEO Nigel Wilson a lot more leeway to divest spare cash to his favourite people: shareholders.

Shakier firms may try to placate noisy shareholders by handing out more in dividends that they can really spare. But paying out a higher proportion of earnings than you can strictly afford always leads to longer-term losses.

Full-year LGEN dividends per share have been chugging along at a steady upwards clip. In 2014 they were at 11.25p. The following year? 13.4p. In 2016 they hit 14.35p, 2017 saw full-year dividends per share at 15.35p, and last year they reached 16.42p.

2019’s interim dividend of 4.93p per share is higher than any of the previous five. If that’s anything to go by — and it usually is — we’re on track for another booming full-year dividend.

Attractive price

LGEN currently trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of 9.03, which means to me while the shares are not dubiously cheap, on the basis of strong long-term gains, this price looks like a bargain.

I ignore shares trading below 6 or 7 times earnings. From experience, at these lower levels, something is wrong in the back end and the market just doesn’t trust the company will actually deliver the earnings it has projected. It happens all the time.

To be a canny long-term buyer, you need to watch these signs and disregard stocks with extremely cheap P/E valuations: they are simply traps for the unwary investor.

Tom owns shares in Legal & General. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. 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.

More on Investing Articles

Light trails from traffic moving down The Mound in central Edinburgh, Scotland during December
Investing Articles

Start investing this month for £5 a day? Here’s how!

Is a fiver a day enough to start investing in the stock market? Yes it is -- and our writer…

Read more »

Young mixed-race couple sat on the beach looking out over the sea
Investing Articles

Investing in high-yield dividend stocks isn’t the only way to compound returns in an ISA or SIPP and build wealth

Generous payouts from dividend stocks can be appealing. But another strategy can offer higher returns over the long run, says…

Read more »

Middle-aged white man wearing glasses, staring into space over the top of his laptop in a coffee shop
Investing Articles

A rare buying opportunity for a defensive FTSE 100 company?

A FTSE 100 stock just fell 5% in a day without anything changing in the underlying business. Is this the…

Read more »

Two elderly people relaxing in the summer sunshine Box Hill near Dorking Surrey England
Investing Articles

Simplify your investing life with this one key tip from Warren Buffett

Making moves in the stock market can be complicated. But as Warren Buffett points out, if you don’t want it…

Read more »

Tesco employee helping female customer
Investing Articles

Is Tesco a second income gem after its 12.9% dividend boost?

As a shareholder, our writer was happy to see Tesco raise dividends -- again. Is it finally a serious contender…

Read more »

Rolls-Royce Hydrogen Test Rig at Loughborough University
Investing Articles

Has the Rolls-Royce share price gone too far?

Stephen Wright breaks out the valuation models to see whether the Rolls-Royce share price might still be a bargain, even…

Read more »

Tŵr Mawr lighthouse (meaning "great tower" in Welsh), on Ynys Llanddwyn on Anglesey, Wales, marks the western entrance to the Menai Strait.
Investing Articles

How much do you need to invest in a FTSE 100 ETF for £1,000 monthly passive income?

Andrew Mackie tested whether a FTSE 100 ETF portfolio could deliver £1,000 a month in passive income – the results…

Read more »

Two business people sitting at cafe working on new project using laptop. Young businesswoman taking notes and businessman working on laptop computer.
Investing Articles

One of my top passive income stocks to consider for 2026 is…

This under-the-radar income stock has grown its dividend by over 370% in the last five years! And it might just…

Read more »