Here’s how to try and create a £10,000 second income portfolio

Millions of UK investors use the Stocks and Shares ISA to build wealth and eventually take a second income. Dr James Fox explains the efficient route.

| More on:

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.

Thoughtful man using his phone while riding on a train and looking through the window

Image source: Getty Images

A £10,000 second income isn’t a fantasy — it’s a maths problem. And like most maths problems, it has a clean solution. You’ve just got to know where to start.

The first number to nail down: how much capital do we actually need? 

If we’re targeting £10,000 a year from dividends, the answer depends on the yield we’re earning. At a 5% yield, we’d need a portfolio worth £200,000. At a 7% yield, that drops to around £143,000. 

Neither figure sounds trivial.

Of course, we don’t need to save £200,000 from scratch. We need to grow our portfolio — using a Stocks and Shares ISA and a largely underappreciated force: compounding.

Let’s run the numbers. An investor putting £400 a month into a Stocks and Shares ISA, earning an average 8% annual return, would have a pot worth approximately £235,000 after 20 years. That’s enough, at a 4.5% yield, to spin off £10,575 a year — a genuine second income, sheltered from tax.

The chart below shows how different monthly contributions stack up against the £200,000 threshold:

Created with Claude

One aspect that jumps out immediately is the curve.

The first decade of investing can feel thankless. Contributions dominate and growth is modest. But somewhere around years 12 to 15, the compounding effect kicks in hard and the line bends sharply upward. That inflection point is everything.

It also explains why starting early beats saving hard. 

An investor contributing £300 per month from age 30 will typically outrun someone putting in £600 per month from age 40 — even though the late starter is doubling down. A decade of compounding is simply very difficult to replicate.

Where to invest?

But here’s something that trips up a lot of investors: building a second income portfolio doesn’t mean holding dividend-paying shares the whole time. During the accumulation phase — the years of growing the pot — many investors actually do better focusing on total return, holding high-growth shares that pay little or no dividend at all.

One stock that I find interesting from a growth perspective, while offering an outsized dividend, is TBC Bank (LSE:TBCG). The Georgian bank has compounded earnings per share at 34% annually since 2020 — yet trades on a forward PE of just 5.2 and has a price-to-earnings-to-growth (PEG) ratio of 0.4.

The forward dividend yield sits at nearly 7%, and that dividend has grown at over 40% a year over the same period, covered almost three times by earnings.

Return on equity of 23.8% and operating margins above 43% tell us that this bank is much more profitable than its UK focused peers. The market simply applies a steep discount for geography: TBC operates primarily in Georgia, and also in Uzbekistan, and that’s where the risk lives.

Specifically, Georgia remains an emerging market with real political volatility. Its proximity to Russia, the instability of the currency against sterling, and the potential for sudden capital flow disruption all mean that the headline numbers can deteriorate fast.

That said, I believe this is an investment worth considering. Georgia’s economy has been the fastest growing in Europe since the pandemic, and TBC still offers good value.

James Fox has no position in any of the shares mentioned. 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

Lady taking a carton of Ben & Jerry's ice cream from a supermarket's freezer
Investing Articles

Up 11% today, could the Magnum Ice Cream share price be an overlooked bargain?

Based on the share price gain, the market certainly liked today's first-quarter results from the Magnum Ice Cream company. What's…

Read more »

Investing Articles

As Endeavour Mining shares jump 7% on Q1 results, is this a way into the gold rush?

Endeavour Mining shares have more than doubled over the past 12 months as gold has soared. But how much risk…

Read more »

British pound data
Investing Articles

£5,000 invested in this red hot FTSE 250 growth stock last month is now worth…

Mark Hartley likes the look of a British tech stock that’s driving massive growth on the FTSE 250. But are…

Read more »

Calendar showing the date of 5th April on desk in a house
Investing Articles

Missed the ISA deadline? Ignoring the next one could mean throwing away a £5,150 annual second income opportunity!

Before April disappears altogether, today is a useful one to reflect on the second income potential a new year's ISA…

Read more »

Investing Articles

As Standard Chartered shares jump on impressive Q1, is this a FTSE 100 banking bargain?

It's a record quarter for Standard Chartered, with FTSE 100 bank shares under Q1 scrutiny at a time of unusual…

Read more »

Amazon Go's first store
Investing Articles

Amazon stock climbs after Q1 earnings! Here’s what I’m doing next

Amazon’s AWS business is growing at its fastest rate in four years and the stock's responding. But what's Stephen Wright's…

Read more »

Google office headquarters
Investing Articles

Alphabet stock surges 7.05% after Q1 earnings! But is it too late to consider buying?

As Google Cloud’s 63% revenue growth outpaces AWS’s 28%, Stephen Wright looks at whether it might not be too late…

Read more »

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

How big a Stocks and Shares ISA is needed to target a £2,932 monthly passive income?

Christopher Ruane explains more than one approach someone could use as they try and turn a Stocks and Shares ISA…

Read more »