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£5,000 of 9.2%-yielding Legal & General shares could make me £599 a month in passive income over time!

Legal and General shares remain a top passive income stock in my core portfolio holdings, with a 9.2% yield and a very undervalued share price, in my view.

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Legal & General (LSE: LGEN) shares are down 14% from their 31 January 12-month traded high of £2.58. As a stock’s price and yield move in opposite directions, the shares now pay an annual dividend return of 9.2%.

However, the financial services and asset management giant has pledged to push these payouts even higher in the coming years. It promised a 5% increase this year from last year’s 20.34p dividend. This would produce a 2024 payment of 21.36p a share (giving a current yield of 9.7%).

Should you buy Legal & General Group Plc 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.

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It has then pledged to increase this by 2% in 2025 (to 21.79p) and by another 2% in 2026 (to 22.23p). These rises would generate respective yields of 9.9% and 10.1%.

How much passive income could be made here?

Passive income is money made from minimal effort, such as dividends paid by shares. I have focused on stocks that can maximise this revenue stream for me since I turned 50 a while ago. I aim to increasingly live off these dividends.

I am considering buying another £5,000 of Legal & General shares to add to my current holding. This would make £460 in dividends this year at a 9.2% yield.

Over 10 years on the same basis, this would rise to £4,600 and over 30 years to £13,800.

Turbocharging returns by compounding

These returns are not to be sniffed at certainly, but much more can be made using ‘dividend compounding’. This is a standard investment practice in which more stock is bought with the dividends that it pays.

By using this method on the same average yield, my £5,000 would make another £7,503 after 10 years, not £4,600. And after 30 years on the same basis, I would have made £73,172 in dividends, rather than £13,800.

By that time, the total value of my Legal & General shares (including the £5,000 initial investment) would be £78,172. On a 9.2% yield, I would be making an annual passive income of £7,192, or £599 each month!

How does the share value look?

A company’s dividend (and its share price) are driven by its earnings growth over time.

A risk for Legal & General is a reversal of the recent downward trajectory in UK inflation and interest rates. This could prompt a resurgence in the cost of living and cause customers to close their investments with the firm.

That said, consensus analysts’ forecasts are that the firm’s earnings will grow by 28% a year to end-2026. Factoring this growth along with other figures into a discounted cash flow analysis shows the shares are currently 59% undervalued.

Therefore, a fair value for Legal & General stock is £5.39, although it may go lower or higher than that, given market unpredictability. However, it underlines to me how cheap the stock looks, in addition to being a passive income gem.

Will I buy more of the stock?

I have bought Legal & General shares several times over the years for the firm’s strong growth prospects. Nothing has changed here, in my view.

Ultimately, I expect these to drive the share price much higher, in addition to maintaining a very high dividend yield.

As such, I will be buying more shares very shortly.

Simon Watkins has positions in Legal & General Group Plc. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. 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.

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