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TFIF Twentyfour Income Fund Limited

104.80
0.00 (0.00%)
28 Mar 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Twentyfour Income Fund Limited LSE:TFIF London Ordinary Share GG00B90J5Z95 ORD RED 1P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.00 0.00% 104.80 656,807 16:28:46
Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price
104.00 104.80 104.80 103.80 104.60
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Finance Services -1.38M -22.6M -0.0353 -29.69 670.66M
Last Trade Time Trade Type Trade Size Trade Price Currency
17:58:44 O 599 104.80 GBX

Twentyfour Income (TFIF) Latest News

Twentyfour Income (TFIF) Discussions and Chat

Twentyfour Income Forums and Chat

Date Time Title Posts
26/3/202417:29Twenty Four Income Fund232

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Twentyfour Income (TFIF) Most Recent Trades

Trade Time Trade Price Trade Size Trade Value Trade Type
17:59:08104.80599627.75O
17:13:37104.801,7981,884.30O
17:08:59104.80551577.45O
16:35:00104.8014,52615,223.25UT
16:22:31104.808386.98AT

Twentyfour Income (TFIF) Top Chat Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 28/3/2024 08:20 by Twentyfour Income Daily Update
Twentyfour Income Fund Limited is listed in the Finance Services sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker TFIF. The last closing price for Twentyfour Income was 104.80p.
Twentyfour Income currently has 639,942,655 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Twentyfour Income is £670,659,902.
Twentyfour Income has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -29.69.
This morning TFIF shares opened at 104.60p
Posted at 13/11/2023 11:17 by mcunliffe1
I secure-messaged Interactive Investor and they have responded to state that TFIF has recently been removed from the DRIP scheme 'due to its complexity'.
Posted at 13/10/2023 08:57 by mcunliffe1
nerja: I did a similar poke. Also, a week prior to that purchase in late May 2023 I did the same amount in RECI. It also pays four divi's a year and both RECI and TFIF seem to have a payout cycle that is 5 days adrift of each other.
Posted at 10/7/2023 14:03 by cc2014
Nope that's not correct. Most of the investments are floating rate.

The fall in share price is due to perceptions on credit risk.
Posted at 10/7/2023 13:59 by future financier
This is akin to a fixed interest stock - so if interest rates available elsewhere rise then the price of this stock must reduce to achieve the same yield.
Posted at 10/7/2023 12:11 by spangle93
What's caused the recent drop in these shares?
It's rare to find TFIF trading any discount, let alone 6% vs the last NAV update
Posted at 23/5/2023 14:08 by cerrito
I too had never heard of TFIF until I read about it on the Fixed Income Board.
I see it trades at a premium to the double digit discount at FAIR and VTA with what appears to be a roughly similar dividend to VTA and lower than FAIR so must be a different animal.
Need to do some work.
Posted at 23/5/2023 09:50 by mcunliffe1
Hello all,

Found this board via the Fixed Income Discussion. Thankyou, as TFIF look like the kind of investment I'm after.

I'll keep an eye on the share price via my ii SIPP throughout the day but I see that this is not a particularly volatile stock. One aspect worrying me though is the lack of overall share price growth when compared to the current inflation rate even with the 9+% yield.

However, it's a better bet than leaving the cash in my SIPP even though ii pay interest on such.

I'm so thankful that you lot point me towards these hitherto unknown possible investments.

Mike
Posted at 18/5/2023 11:26 by my retirement fund
Let me get this clear, I can tender all my shares in the recent corporate action for less than the current market price?
Posted at 26/1/2023 16:11 by cwa1
TwentyFour Income Fund Limited (LSE: TFIF) is pleased to announce that, to satisfy market demand and to raise money for investment in accordance with the Company’s investment policy, 1,000,000 ordinary shares of 1 pence each in the capital of the Company were today issued from its holding in Treasury at a price of 98.80 pence per share raising £988,000 (before costs and expenses).

Following the issue, the Company will hold 11,100,000 ordinary shares in Treasury and the issued share capital will comprise 703,536,661 ordinary shares. This figure may be used by shareholders as the denominator for the calculations by which they will determine if they are required to notify their interest in, or a change to their interest in, the share capital of the Company under the FCA's Disclosure and Transparency Rules.
Posted at 21/9/2022 11:55 by ammons
Re the Telegraph article.

How to secure 14pc returns – even as we head into a recession

Questor investment trust bargain: this fund’s divi is in line for a boost and its assets should follow suit for a double-digit total return
By Richard Evans 15 September 2022 • 6:00am

For that elusive combination of high returns and low risk, Questor has tended to favour either specialist property funds or specialist bond funds.

Our thinking is that the professionals who run these portfolios develop such deep understanding of their markets, and have cultivated such fruitful networks of the contacts on which successful deal-making in these areas often depends, that they can buck the normal rules of investing and unearth assets that really can deliver good returns at disproportionately low risk.

Among the property funds tipped here, we would put into this category the likes of Residential Secure Income, Triple Point Social Housing and Regional Reit; for bond funds we would mention Real Estate Credit Investments, BioPharma Credit, Honeycomb – and TwentyFour Income, the portfolio we cover today.

The share price chart since we first tipped the fund in 2018 at 116.5p may seem uninspiring; with the shares at 104.5p we are in the red to the tune of 10.3pc in capital terms. But this is to ignore its income – the portfolio has exceeded its dividend target of 6p a share every year since it listed in 2013.

What is more, we can now expect big increases in the divi, and indeed in the fund’s net asset value and hence in all probability in the share price too, because of the way the portfolio’s assets work.

There are two forces at play here. First, the managers invest in “floating̴9;rate” assets, so rises in interest rates mean more income for the fund.

The second is more complex. The market value of many of its assets has fallen in recent months as investors more generally have sold bonds in response to the rise in inflation. But TwentyFour Income’s managers tend to hold their investments until they mature – which of course they do at “par” value, or the amount originally lent when the bonds were issued.

As the maturity date approaches (and the fund’s assets are about three years from maturity on average), the market price naturally tends to rise back up to the par level at which investors will be repaid. And, when the money from matured bonds is reinvested, it will generate higher interest rates if used to buy other bonds at depressed prices.

None of this, obviously, would hold water if the more perilous economic times we are entering led to a spate of defaults among the fund’s bond holdings. But this is where that specialisation on the managers’ part we referred to above comes into its own. Such is their skill at assessing the creditworthiness of those they lend to (and mortgage borrowers in Britain and Europe, via “mortgage̴9;backed bonds”, account for about 60pc by value) that the fund has never suffered a default.

“TwentyFour Income has never held an investment that has defaulted, nor has it ever held a position that has subsequently defaulted after it owned it,” said Numis, the broker, last month. “There are no credit‑impaired positions in the portfolio and bonds have been underwritten against adverse scenarios more severe than the global financial crisis.”

Let’s return to the rising income we can expect thanks to increases in interest rates.

“We expect the [fund’s] dividends for the current year to be substantially higher than the prior year given the rise in base rates,” Numis said.

“We see scope for a dividend of 8.6p‑9p, equivalent to an 8.3pc‑8.7pc dividend yield on the share price [almost unchanged since its note], based only on the change in market expectations for UK interest rates. This is assuming there is no benefit from reinvesting any [bond repayments] at the current attractive [rates].”

But the broker said it could see scope for “an even higher dividend” as more of the portfolio’s bonds matured and the proceeds were reinvested at better rates. For the year to March 2024 “we could see scope for a dividend of about 10p”, it said, although it said “a lot could change between then and now”.

But we also need to consider the potential for capital gains as the prices of its bonds drift upwards towards par value as maturity approaches.

Adding together the yield and these likely capital gains, Numis said “total returns in the medium term should be closer to … about 14pc [a year]”.

Fourteen per cent from a bond portfolio that has never suffered a default is a very attractive proposition. Buy.

Questor says: buy

Tickers: TFIF

Share prices at close: 104.5p
Twentyfour Income share price data is direct from the London Stock Exchange

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