Income investors frustrated by the low rates of interest have had to look elsewhere for alternative sources of yield. The ideal investment for anyone in this position would be a relatively low risk fund that pays a reliable inflation-linked income like a property or infrastructure investment trust, but most of these vehicles are now trading at a significant premium to their net asset value (NAV).
A new investment trust has recently floated on the London Stock Exchange that ticks all the right boxes and it is still trading close to its NAV. The Supermarket Income REIT (LON:SUPR) will invest in a portfolio of supermarket real-estate assets. Its tenants will mainly be the four largest supermarkets and these will provide the fund with a secure, long-term source of inflation-linked income.
by Jim Mellon| Equities | 6mins. to read There are three of us Mellons currently trying to get books out ahead of each other: my father is finishing one on African Bangles; my brother in law is close to completing a magnus opus on the future of media; and I am pleased to say that, albeit delayed, Juvenescence is coming out on September.
by Victor Hill| Economics | 11 mins. to read How does a spendthrift state which consumes nearly 57 percent of its GDP change its ways? How does a regulated, highly unionised labour market become flexible? What can a modern economy do about an unemployment rate stuck stubbornly at over ten percent? And how do the French rate the Emperor Emmanuel's first ten weeks in power? The answers are obscured by the Macron miasma.
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