Q2 headline fall in UK dividends concealed underlying resilience
- Q2 headline dividends fell 9.0% year-on-year to £32.8bn thanks to lower one-off special payments
- Regular payouts rose to £32.2bn, up 3.5% on an underlying basis
- Banking dividends jumped by three fifths to £7.8bn
- Mining dividends fell by a third, in line with forecast – and there were pockets of weakness among retailers
- Top 100 dividends outpaced mid-caps for the first time since Q2 2021
- Yields on other asset classes now surpass equities for the first time since the Global Financial Crisis
- Headline dividends upgraded to £92.3bn for 2023, a fall of 1.7% year-on-year owing to lower special dividends
- Regular payouts upgraded by £2.7bn to £88.9bn, up 6.1% on an underlying basis – banks are the main driver of the upgrade
“For the first time since before the Global Financial Crisis, the MPC’s 0.5% percentage point hike in Bank Rate has pushed yields on UK government bonds and even interest on cash savings accounts above equity yields.”
Mark Cleland
CEO Issuer Services, UCIA