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Dollar dividends get £1.4bn boost

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16 Aug 2022

UK plc’s dividends have been upgraded, but there could be trouble ahead, finds Andrew Holt.

dollar strong currency us

UK plc’s dividends have been upgraded, but there could be trouble ahead, finds Andrew Holt.

dollar strong currency us

A weak pound saw UK dividends reach almost record heights in the second quarter, forcing an upgrade in expectations for the year. Investors shared £37bn of corporate cash in the three months to the end of June, 38.6% more than they did in the same period a year earlier. This was the second-largest quarterly total on record, according to Link.

Large one-off special payments were a big driver. But the underlying dividends, which exclude those specials, jumped 27% to £32bn in 12 months, boosted by a weak pound.

The dollar-sterling exchange rate is playing an influential role in the dividend picture.

In the second quarter, two-fifths of shareholder payments were in US dollars, generating an exchange rate boost of £1.4bn to their sterling value (see graph). This means the pound’s weakness is set to add between £3.5bn and £4.5bn to the full year’s total.

This has helped to reshape the UK dividend outlook. Link has upgraded its UK plc dividend forecast for 2022, with expectations that headline pay-outs will rise 2.4% to £96.3bn, while underlying pay-outs – which exclude special dividends – could jump 12.5% to £86.8bn.

If sterling maintains its current level for the rest of 2022, it is set to have its worst year against the dollar. The translated value of dollar dividends is, therefore, getting a big boost.

But the outlook is not all positive. Core growth expectations are slightly weaker, reflecting the likelihood that mining dividends have peaked. Such payments contributed almost a quarter of the total in the three months to the end of June.

There are two other concerns that could impact the positive dividend picture.

The first is the post-pandemic dividend catch-up effects. Companies suspended dividends during Covid, but this will soon wash out of the figures. And the UK entering a recession could also hinder the ability of many companies to grow their dividends.

Q2 exchange rate boost/penalty

Source: Link Group

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