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The Market Signal That Keeps Flashing 'Buy'

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Turbulent markets

Published in Investing on 8 October 2008

The market's dividend yield approaches 5% and shares look very cheap.

Amid all the bail-outs, bankruptcies, meltdowns and mayhem, there's one market signal that keeps flashing 'buy'.

During the last week or so, the dividend yield on the FTSE All-Share index has reached almost 5%. That's the highest income since the early Nineties and it now exceeds the yield on offer from 10-year gilts (government bonds).

Date

FTSE All-Share

All-Share Yield (%)

Gilt yield (%)

29 Sep 08

2,445

4.76

4.38

30 Sep 08

2,484

4.68

4.45

1 Oct 08

2,510

4.63

4.43

2 Oct 08

2,473

4.71

4.37

3 Oct 08

2,522

4.61

4.41

6 Oct 08

2,329

4.90

4.22

The last time shares in general yielded more than gilts occurred right at the bottom of the 2000-03 dotcom crash. 

Date

FTSE All-Share

All-Share Yield (%)

Gilt yield (%)

12 Mar 03

1,593

4.24

4.04

Had you bought the All-Share back then, you'd have more than doubled your money by the time you read this article four years later. Beyond that single day during March 2003, I think you have to go back at least forty years to find the last time the market's dividend yield topped the income from gilts.

So why does this so-called 'reverse yield gap' signal a market 'buy'. It effectively means investors have become so depressed with their shares that they think aggregate company payouts will shrink over the long run. That belief, however, defies decades of market history. During the last fifty years for example, dividend payments from London shares have grown a collective 30 times according to the Barclays Equity-Gilt study.

Certainly there is going to be some short-term dividend pain. Banks for instance have very uncertain payouts at present. The sector represents 15% of the All-Share index and yields 8%. If aggregate bank payouts halve in value, the market's yield could fall to 4.3%. If bank dividends disappear completely, the market's yield could fall to 3.7%.

The other worry is that gilts could be the wrong 'safe haven' comparison. These days a deposit account with HSBC (LSE: HSBA), widely seen as one of the country's more secure banks, pays a 5.5% income. The All-Share would have to fall from 2,329 to 2,075 -- another 10% -- to offer dividend income of 5.5%.

So what now? The headlines are grim, share prices keep falling and there are plenty of reasons not to buy. But that was the case during March 2003, on Black Monday in 1987 and when the Seventies bear market bottomed during early 1975. All were extremely anxious times, but all proved to be first-class buying opportunities for patient investors. For now at least, there's a market signal that keeps flashing 'buy' and I for one am still backing the index. Good luck and happy investing.

> You can invest in the stock market for the long-term via an index tracker fund 

> Disclosure: Maynard owns iShares FTSE 100, an exchange-traded fund that tracks the FTSE 100, and continues to contribute regularly to a FTSE All-Share tracker.

More: This Silly Selling Must End Soon

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Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

GrahamMiller0 09 Oct 2008, 9:20am

As someone who has just started investing via a Stocks and Shares Tracker ISA, I am rather pleased with the current low prices.

Just as long as prices are a *lot* better in 10 years when I retire, I shall be happy.

Sorry about that.

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gartons 09 Oct 2008, 9:58am

Can anyone in their right mind realistically consider investing in the stock market at present?

Unless of course, you're gambling with other people's money which is how the clowns in the City make their undeserved bonuses.

Chongq 09 Oct 2008, 1:25pm

Actually yield is higher than stated. Many majors e.g. BP, BHP pay dividends in $US and are worth about 20% more than the historic, actual last dividend payments used by you and most tables e.g. FT. BP dividend is already above 7% and looking safe with production rising and oil prices still realtively high, and reduced working capital costs.
even those who pay in pounds such as rolls royce earn most of their money in $US

CunningCliff 09 Oct 2008, 3:53pm

"Can anyone in their right mind realistically consider investing in the stock market at present?"

The UK market is down about a third (33%) since the start of the year. After a fall of that magnitude, many bargains are appearing. I'd take a look more closely, if I were you, because the biggest returns come after the biggest falls.

Cliff

Zweiblumen 10 Oct 2008, 12:44pm

Forgive me if I am sceptical about comparisons with events over the last 50 years, a timespan that stops short of the Depression. No crisis or crash since then provides a sensible basis for comparison with current problems.

In the current situation, using historic yields as a basis for valuation is optimistic at best- we appear to be entering a prolonged global economic slowdown, which may just affect companies' profits, capital growth and dividend policies!

Doubtless the market will overshoot, but it's by no means certain that it has already done so.

Beagle2Mars 11 Oct 2008, 2:48pm

Let's be mavericks. An analyst on Bloomberg two days ago almost called a 'bottom' due to some very technical (read complicated) historical calculations. Let's be positive and talk the market up. Fools are positive.

Besides I would rather be known as someone who hung on and bought rather than someone who ran with the herd. Of course I may have been wrong to take bank shares instead of cash dividends but hey life with risk is more fun.

djf184f 11 Oct 2008, 9:27pm

You come across as a knowledgeable fellow Cliff. Could you explain to this rather baffled fool how the share market works. You see,what I do not understand is that as shares are becoming worthless and holders are selling, by definition, someone is buying. Who are these people and shouldn't we be listening to them? They appear to know where the bargins are and where gains are to be made. Sorry if this is a mundane question but we can't all be at the top of the tree of knowledge.

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