We have some exciting news to share! The Motley Fool UK has now become The Twelfth Magpie -- an independent, UK-owned company, led by our long-serving UK management team — Mark Rogers, Chris Nials and Heather Adlington. In practical terms, it’s the same team you know, now fully focused on serving our UK readers and members.

Just as importantly, our approach remains unchanged: long-term, jargon-free, and on your side. This site is our new home, and there will be extra tweaks made across the coming few days as we settle in. So if anything looks a little off, please bear with us!

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

Spotting The ‘Yield Traps’ That Could Scupper Your Income

The higher the yield, the more you have to ask: why is the yield so high?

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Twelfth Magpie’s Premium Investing Services. Become a member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn more, and get a free 'Best Buy Now' stock!.

For income seekers, a business paying a juicy yield is obviously a good thing. So a business paying an even juicier yield has to be an even better thing, right?
 
Not so fast.
 
Because while that first company may well be a genuine high-yielding business of the sort that income seekers love to stuff in their portfolios, the second could turn out to be a yield trap.
 
And yield traps are businesses that you most definitely don’t want in your portfolio — whatever your investing style.
 
Why? Because not only do yield traps offer dismal income prospects, but their share prices have a nasty habit of heading south alongside their dividend payouts.

Gotcha!

Now, yield traps don’t announce themselves as such.
 
Online data resources don’t have a column headed ‘Yield trap’, with a tick against appropriate names. Companies themselves, ever bullish, never utter the words.
 
And more to the point, you can only know for sure that a business is a yield trap, after the event.
 
Prior to that, it’s a just a potential yield trap — a share with a mouth-watering yield that lures the greedy towards it, until — too late! — investors find themselves nursing a hefty capital loss and an income that is only a shadow of what they had expected.

Should you buy Rolls Royce shares today?

Before you decide, please take a moment to review this report first. Despite ongoing uncertainties from US tariffs to global conflicts, Mark Rogers and his team believe many UK shares still trade at substantial discounts, offering savvy investors plenty of potential opportunities to learn about.

That’s why this could be an ideal time to secure this valuable research – Mark’s analysts have scoured the markets to reveal 5 of his favourite long-term ‘Buys’. Please, don’t make any big decisions before seeing them.

Now you see it, now you don’t

So what exactly is a yield trap? And how do income investors spot the warning signs?
 
Let’s take the two questions separately.
 
At its simplest, a yield trap is a share that offers an investor a yield that is too high to be sustainable.
 
So in general, shares offering yields of 7%, 8%, 9% or more are definitely in potential yield trap territory. 5%? 6%? That’s when spotting a yield trap starts to get difficult.
 
Because if the market thought that those implied yields were genuinely sustainable, then it would simply bid the share price back up to the point where the yield came closer to the market average of 3.5% or so.

In short, a very high yield is often a warning flag that the market has serious doubts that the yield is sustainable — the first warning sign of a yield trap. Put another way, the 7% or so that’s seemingly on offer when you buy the shares may turn out to be illusory.

Greedy, when others are fearful

 An example will help. Let’s take Company A, which offers a forecast dividend of 35 pence on a share price of £10 — in other words, that market-average yield of 3½%.
 
35 pence
========       = 3½% yield
1000 pence
 
Now, let’s suppose that the City starts to doubt that this 35 pence dividend is sustainable, and that the company might be forced to cut it, due to declining profits. A profit warning may even have been issued.
 
Why in particular might profits decline? Ask any of today’s mining companies, as demand from China slows down. Or oil companies, as the price of oil crashes. Or supermarket retailers, as squeezed shoppers desert to cheaper outlets.
 
Enough: you get the picture. Either way, the share price starts to slip, down towards £5, and the forecast yield inexorably rises.
 
Put another way, what you end up with looks something like this:
 
35 pence
========       = 7% yield
500 pence

7% yield! It’s a bargain — and so it is, right up until the moment when the board of directors bows to the inevitable, announces a dividend cut, and the share price sinks even lower. Gotcha!

Be brave, not greedy

Now let’s take a different situation. Company B again offers a market-average yield of 3½%, based on a dividend of 35 pence and a share price of £10.
 
35 pence
========       = 3½% yield
1000 pence
 
That said, its sector is in trouble — trouble which shouldn’t affect our well-managed Company B, but which admittedly might do. Plus, there are stock market worries over the euro crisis, or the economy, or international conflict, or some over macro-type situation.
 
In short, while there’s no particular reason to suspect that Company B’s profits — and therefore dividends — will be affected, its share price is dragged down along with the rest of the market or sector, eventually touch £5.
 
So pretty soon, what you’re looking at is:
 
35 pence
========       = 7% yield
500 pence
 

7% yield! It’s a bargain — and in a few months, as the market recovers and the share price regains its former level, you’re still banking that tasty 35 pence dividend, while also eyeing up a 100% capital gain.
 
The yield has slid back to 3.5%, of course — but only for new investors, not those who locked in 7% by being brave.

Rule of thumb

So there we have it: two tasty yields, but one of them a yield trap, the other not.
 
How to tell the difference in real life?
 
It is difficult. My advice: the more company-specific the news that hits a company’s share price, the more likely a yield trap is.
 
So repeated profit warnings or banana skins, for instance, are more likely to signal ‘yield trap’ rather than ‘bargain’. On the other hand, watch out for sector-based or cyclical trends that aren’t necessarily company specific, but will could well affect earnings.
 
It can be a tough call — and personally, I always looks twice at a yield that is more than around one and half times the market average.

More on Investing Articles

Satellite on planet background
Investing Articles

Down 19% to under £20! Is now exactly the right time for me to capitalise on BAE Systems’ bargain-basement share price?

BAE Systems’ share price has dropped sharply, but a far bigger long term demand cycle is only just beginning. Here’s…

Read more »

Person holding magnifying glass over important document, reading the small print
Investing Articles

Closing in on £33 and around an all‑time high, is this FTSE 250 favourite seriously mispriced?

With the shares pushing into record territory, I’ve revisited the underlying business, its growth outlook and the valuation picture investors…

Read more »

Close-up of British bank notes
Investing Articles

£20,000 invested in Barclays shares a year ago is now worth…

Barclays shares have quietly delivered a 41% return in just 12 months — and the long term numbers suggest the…

Read more »

Young black woman walking in Central London for shopping
Investing Articles

£9,000 in an ISA? Here’s how to target a £675 passive income with 7% investment trusts

Investment trusts can offer a huge and stable passive income every year. Royston Wild reveals three to consider -- including…

Read more »

A rear view of a female in a bright yellow coat walking along the historic street known as The Shambles in York, UK which is a popular tourist destination in this Yorkshire city.
Investing Articles

These 3 shares could deliver a £1,840 second income in an ISA overnight!

With an average dividend yield of 9.2%, these top UK shares could deliver turn a £20,000 ISA into a huge…

Read more »

Wall Street sign in New York City
Investing Articles

Up 5.3%, the Dow Jones lags other US indices in 2026. Here’s why UK income investors should pay attention

Mark Hartley highlights how US indices blur the real market story with tech-driven hype, and why the Dow Jones matters…

Read more »

Businessman hand stacking money coins with virtual percentage icons
Investing Articles

£1,000 buys 531 shares in this UK defence and nuclear stock that’s tipped to soar

This UK stock offers growth and income at an attractive valuation. Could it be worth considering for an ISA or…

Read more »

A senior Hispanic couple kayaking
Investing Articles

How much money do you need to retire comfortably with a SIPP?

Buying shares in a Self-Invested Personal Pension (SIPP) can make hitting your retirement goals much easier. Royston Wild explains how.

Read more »