3 top income stocks you shouldn’t miss: HSBC Holdings plc, PayPoint plc and Mitie Group plc

Bilaal Mohamed discusses the virtues of three top income shares you may have missed: HSBC Holdings plc (LON: HSBA), PayPoint plc (LON: PAY) and Mitie Group plc (LON: MTO).

| 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’ll be discussing the outlook for payment services company PayPoint, outsourcing group Mitie, and banking giant HSBC. Is the chunky dividend income offered by these three companies too good to miss?

Dividend hike

Payment services firm PayPoint (LSE: PAY) has enjoyed a decent rally recently despite reporting a plunge in profits for the last financial year to the end of March. Pre-tax profits fell sharply to £8.2m, from £49.6m, on slightly lower revenues of £213m, compared to £219m a year earlier. The lower profits were largely due to a £30.8m impairment charged booked against the company’s mobile payments business, which is up for sale.

However, adjusted operating profit was up from £49.5m to £50.1m, and the full-year dividend was raised to 42.4p per share. In addition, the company plans to return a further 21p per share from the proceeds of its online payments unit. The FTSE 250 firm has an excellent track record when it comes to dividends, with payouts increasing every year since 2005. At current levels, the share price supports prospective yields of 6.1% for this year, rising to 6.7% for the year to March 2018.

Share buyback

Strategic outsourcing and energy services company Mitie Group (LSE: MTO) has launched a £20m share buyback programme to return surplus cash to shareholders, after the firm revealed a more-than-doubling of pre-tax profits for the year to March. The Bristol-based group reported a massive 133% rise in pre-tax profits to £97m, from £42m for the same period a year earlier, even though it recorded slightly lower revenues of £2.23bn.

The outsourcing specialist also announced a 3.4% hike in the total dividend payout to 12.1p, with the final payment of 6.7p going ex-dividend on the fateful date of 23 June. The company was also proud to announce that the dividend had been increased for the 27th consecutive year, and proud it should be! Analysts are forecasting further increases in the medium term, with yields forecast at 4.5% and 4.7% for this year and next. With Mitie’s track record, I certainly wouldn’t bet against it.

Director’s cut

One of HSBC’s (LSE: HSBA) non-executive directors recently dipped into his wallet and bought 20,827 shares in the bank at a total cost of £93,621. Joachim Faber extended his holding in the global banking giant to 66,605 shares, bringing his total interest in the lender to almost £300,000. With the shares down 28% from a year ago maybe the time was right to snap up a bargain.

At current levels, HSBC is trading on a lowly 11 times forecast earnings for the current year, falling to just 10 times in 2017. And with dividend yields forecast at 7.7% and 7.6% for the next couple of years, who could blame him for being greedy when others are fearful?

Bilaal Mohamed has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK owns shares of PayPoint. The Motley Fool UK has recommended HSBC Holdings. 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

Businessman hand stacking up arrow on wooden block cubes
Growth Shares

Why I think the HSBC share price could hit 2,000p by December

Jon Smith explains why the HSBC share price could be primed to rally for the rest of the year, despite…

Read more »

Elevated view over city of London skyline
Investing Articles

£15,000 invested in UK shares a decade ago is now worth…

How have UK shares performed in recent years? That depends which ones you have in mind, as our writer explains.…

Read more »

Businessman hand stacking money coins with virtual percentage icons
Investing Articles

3 FTSE shares with many years of consecutive dividend growth

Paul Summers picks out a selection of FTSE shares that have offered passive income seekers consistency for quite a long…

Read more »

piggy bank, searching with binoculars
Investing Articles

Prediction: Diageo shares could soar in the next 5 years if this happens…

Diageo shares have been in the doldrums for some years now. What on earth could waken this FTSE 100 dud…

Read more »

Investing Articles

With a P/E of 5.9 is this a once-in-a-decade opportunity to buy dirt-cheap easyJet shares?

Today marks a fresh low for easyJet shares, which are falling on a disappointing set of first-half results. Harvey Jones…

Read more »

Investing Articles

Think the soaring Tesco share price is too good to be true? Read this…

The Tesco share price keeps climbing. It's up again today, following a positive set of results, but Harvey Jones says…

Read more »

Artillery rocket system aimed to the sky and soldiers at sunset.
Investing Articles

BAE Systems shares are up 274% in 46 months. And I reckon there could be more to come

Our writer’s been learning about the state of Britain’s defence forces. And he thinks it could be good news for…

Read more »

Stack of British pound coins falling on list of share prices
Investing Articles

5 years ago, £5,000 bought 218 Greggs shares. How many would it buy now?

Greggs sells around 150m sausage rolls every year. But have those who bought the baker’s shares in April 2021 made…

Read more »