Trustnet Magazine Issue 6 April 2015 | Page 15

TRUSTS TEMPLE BAR INVESTMENT TRUST The contrarian approach taken by manager Alastair Mundy means Temple Bar can often lag its peers - which is the case today. But does this make it the perfect time to buy? trustnet.com term investors given that both the shares and underlying portfolio are cheap. Investors who buy in now will no doubt hope Mundy can repeat his performance since he took on the portfolio in October 2002. However, there is another reason why investors may want to take a closer look at Temple Bar. It is, after all, an equity income trust and its yield of 3.3 per cent looks attractive considering the yields on offer from cash and bonds. Investment trusts can also “smooth” their dividends by retaining 15 per cent of their annual earnings so they can maintain or increase their payout in bad years – a feature not available to their open-ended rivals. This has helped Temple Bar increase its dividend in every one of the last 31 years. For example, its dividend was 25.59p per share in 2002, while last year it was 38.88p. Given the manager’s track record, the trust’s dividend history and the fact the portfolio – both at a share price and und