Passive income ideas come in many shapes and sizes.
Some are new, but one is old – Very Old – Buying shares in businesses in the hope of earning dividends.
This could be a way to turn even just five pounds a day into hundreds of pounds of monthly passive income.
This way.
Start setting aside money regularly
The same approach can work with more or less money. The income earned will vary accordingly.
But a key element, regardless of quantity Stability.
Creating a habit of making regular contributions can help set the stage for increasing passive income streams.
Choose a suitable investment platform
In the beginning, that £5 a day could simply be left in a jam jar on the windowsill.
However, cash cannot remain there forever if it is to generate dividends. He’ll take dividend stocks – and a way to buy them.
So an initial step in this passive income process would be to choose a share-dealing account, stocks and shares ISA, or trading app.
Know what you need to know
Dividends are never guaranteed, even if a company has paid them in the past. Not only that, but buying dividend stocks can result in capital losses if they later decline in value.
Therefore, it is helpful to understand important concepts like free cash flow and the relationship between dividends and share valuation before you start building a portfolio of dividend stocks.
Compound now for future income
It may feel good when the dividends start coming in. But instead of spending them, reinvesting them in the beginning could be a smart move.
Doing this can grow the size of a portfolio faster than just making an ongoing contribution of £5 a day.
Compounding £5 a day for 25 years at a 6% annual rate, the portfolio should be worth more than £100k.
At that size, a 6% dividend yield would mean £500 of passive income per month.
Building a Portfolio
Selecting stocks to buy is an important step.
6% is almost double the current FTSE 100 Yield. I consider this achievable, but it is important not to pursue yield while ignoring the risks. The higher yield could be a sign that the City is looking at the possibility of a dividend cut.
I believe investors should already be considering a yield closer to 6% at 5.7%. It also has a remarkable track record of annual dividend growth dating back decades.
That stock is a FTSE 100 cigarette maker British American Tobacco (LSE:BATS).
Past performance is not necessarily a guide to what to expect, even if the company aims to continue increasing its dividend annually. Falling cigarette sales volumes already mean company revenues are falling – and it could get worse.
