I’d try to grow a £100K SIPP by 9% annually doing this!

Our writer thinks a slow and steady approach could help him build the value of his SIPP dramatically. Here he explains why and how. The post I’d try to grow a £100K SIPP by 9% annually doing this! appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.

Mar 23, 2024 - 19:30
 0
I’d try to grow a £100K SIPP by 9% annually doing this!

Young woman working at modern office. Technical price graph and indicator, red and green candlestick chart and stock trading computer screen background.

One of the things I like about investing in a SIPP is that the timeframe is an ideal match for my long-term approach to investing.

Imagine if I could grow a £100K SIPP by 9% annually, excluding any new contributions I made. After 10 years, it ought to be worth £237,000.

After 20 years, I would have comfortably passed a valuation of half a million pounds. Thirty years in, my initial £100,000 investment would be showing a valuation of £1.3m.

Is it possible?

I think so, by sticking to some fairly simple investment principles.

Spreading the load

If I found an amazing share I thought could produce spectacular returns, ought I to load my SIPP up with it to the exclusion of other options?

I do not think so. The problem I see is: the problems I cannot see!

In other words, a company can face challenges that are not obvious. So I would spread my SIPP over a range of different shares. With £100K, that should be easily doable.

Quality of dividends

Few shares have a dividend yield as high as 9%, although some do. Those that do, though, may have a high yield partly because investors expect a cut.

Vodafone currently yields over 9%, for example, but announced this month that from next year it plans to slash its dividend by half.

So, with a 9% compound annual return as a target, ought I to focus on dividend or growth shares?

Yields of 9% are rare but some growth shares can return much more than that. A look at the NVIDIA share price chart neatly illustrates the point.

The answer, I think, is that both growth and income shares might have a place in my SIPP. But rather than focusing purely on dividend yield, I would look at the quality of the dividend.

Is it well supported? Does the business have some competitive advantage that could help maintain or grow it over the long run?

At the end of the day, I look for the same characteristics in both growth and income shares. I want to invest in businesses I believe have outstanding business prospects that are significantly undervalued in their current share price.

Business outlook and share valuation

As an example, consider a share I own in my SIPP: JD Sports (LSE: JD).

It does pay a dividend. That dividend has seen a big increase. But with a yield far below 9%, I would not expect to hit a 9% annual compound annual return target from the dividend alone.

However, I think JD also offers exciting growth prospects. It plans to open hundreds of new shops annually.

The company has a proven business model that it could expand both in its existing markets – like the US – and new ones. It has also been experimenting with ideas on how to grow its reach, for example by operating gyms.

After a profit warning in January, the shares have lost momentum. Risks include a soft economy leading to lower demand for pricy trainers, hurting profits.

But if shares like JD ultimately deliver for me, I think a long-term 9% annual growth target for my SIPP is achievable.

The post I’d try to grow a £100K SIPP by 9% annually doing this! appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.

Should you buy JD Sports shares today?

Before you decide, please take a moment to review this first.

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.

Claim your free copy now

setButtonColorDefaults("#5FA85D", 'background', '#5FA85D'); setButtonColorDefaults("#43A24A", 'border-color', '#43A24A'); setButtonColorDefaults("#FFFFFF", 'color', '#FFFFFF'); })()

More reading

C Ruane has positions in JD Sports Fashion and Vodafone Group Public. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Nvidia and Vodafone Group Public. 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.

What's Your Reaction?

like

dislike

love

funny

angry

sad

wow

viralnews360 I'm an IT whiz by day, a wordsmith by night. With a keyboard in hand and a head full of code, I translate the complexities of the digital world into engaging stories for the folks at ViralNews360. When I'm not deciphering algorithms or wrangling servers, you'll find me exploring the latest tech trends and crafting articles that inform, inspire, and maybe even spark a few laughs. Join me on the journey as I bridge the gap between tech and everyday life, one byte at a time!