Top
Image Alt

The Investing Box

  /  Editor's Pick   /  Lifelong passive income for £25 a week? Here’s how

Lifelong passive income for £25 a week? Here’s how

Investor looking at stock graph on a tablet with their finger hovering over the Buy button

The only thing better than generating one-off passive income from the stock market is to make it for life. Some investors feel that as soon as a dividend gets credited to their account, it must be spent.

Sure, the income is there to be enjoyed. Yet to reap benefits for decades to come, a different strategy is needed. Even with a modest amount of £25 a week, it’s possible to enjoy sizeable cash further down the line.

Reinvesting and compounding

Complicated jargon doesn’t impress anybody. Yet to understand why it’s better to save rather than spend, investors need to grasp two concepts.

Reinvesting is when I take a dividend received and buy more shares with it. Typically, it makes sense to put the dividend income back in the company that has just paid it out.

For example, let’s say I save my £25 for a few weeks and invest the £100 in a stock yielding 7%. If I assume an annual dividend gets paid, I’d take the £7 and buy more. I now have £107, which should pay me £7.50 next year.

The process of multiplying my return is known as compounding. Over time, the reinvestment amount grows and grows. It’s a much faster pace than if I simply spent the dividend each time and left my initial capital in the company.

The main risk here is that I might struggle to reinvest at the same yield as before. Let’s say I invest at 7% today. In two years’ time, I could get paid another dividend that I use to purchase more of the same share. But if the yield is only 4% at that point in time, it drags down my average yield.

Building up with £25 a week

Straight off the bat, I’m not suggesting an investment of £25 each week. When we add up all the different fees associated with buying and selling stocks, it doesn’t make sense. Rather, combining the weekly amount and investing once a month, or once every couple of months, makes a lot more sense.

I’ve figured that I’m happy to take the passive income I make for the next 30 years and reinvest it. Then when I get close to retirement, I’ll start to enjoy it. I’m still making lifelong income, but choosing when and where to save or spend it.

If I invest £100 each month with an average yield of 6%, I’ll have a pot worth £101k after three decades. From there, I can stop and enjoy £505 a month in dividend income!

Clearly, I have to be mindful of the reinvestment risk. This could mean my pot is smaller than £101k. I’m also conscious that my financial situation could change when looking out this far. Yet when I’m referring to £25 a week, I’m pretty confident that I can keep up this commitment for the long term.

The post Lifelong passive income for £25 a week? Here’s how appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.

However, don’t buy any shares just yet

Because my colleague Mark Rogers – The Motley Fool UK’s Director of Investing – has released this special report.

It’s called ‘5 Stocks for Trying to Build Wealth After 50’.

And it’s yours, free.

Of course, the decade ahead looks hazardous. What with inflation recently hitting 40-year highs, a ‘cost of living crisis’ and threat of a new Cold War, knowing where to invest has never been trickier.

And yet, despite the UK stock market recently hitting a new all-time high, Mark and his team think many shares still trade at a substantial discount, offering savvy investors plenty of potential opportunities to strike.

That’s why now could be an ideal time to secure this valuable investment research.

Mark’s ‘Foolish’ analysts have scoured the markets low and high.

This special report reveals 5 of his favourite long-term ‘Buys’.

Please, don’t make any big decisions before seeing them.

Secure your FREE copy

setButtonColorDefaults(“#5FA85D”, ‘background’, ‘#5FA85D’);
setButtonColorDefaults(“#43A24A”, ‘border-color’, ‘#43A24A’);
setButtonColorDefaults(“#ffffff”, ‘color’, ‘#FFFFFF’);
})()

More reading

  • How safe is the Persimmon dividend?
  • A bull run is coming! How I’d invest £5k in FTSE shares before the stock market rally
  • 1 multimillion pound reason to open a Stocks and Shares ISA
  • Is RC365 stock really linked to the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution?
  • 5 steps to building a yearly second income of £76,160 from UK dividend stocks

Jon Smith has no position in any of the shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.