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Why boring is often best when targeting a second income from the stock market

Tech hype has taken a hit this week, highlighting why second income portfolios often benefit more from ‘boring’ stocks. Mark Hartley explains.

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Why boring investing can beat the thrill of hype when we’re targeting a second income is simple: steady cash beats story stocks most of the time. 

Hyped tech names often reinvest every penny or swing wildly in price, while dull‑sounding firms quietly send out regular dividends that feel like a second paycheque.

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.

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.

As Peter Lynch famously said: “The best companies to own are often the most boring”, and that mindset is tailor‑made for income investing.

So if we want our portfolio to help pay the bills, not just entertain us, where should we look first?

Why boring wins for second income

For income, I’d rather be roughly right with cash flow than precisely wrong with a story. Established businesses with long dividend records give us that predictability. Their dividends may only grow a few percent a year, but it’s growth we can actually plan around.

I tend to think about ‘boring’ income stocks through five simple lenses:

  • Predictable payouts and steady earnings.
  • Lower volatility than hot-ticket growth names.
  • The ability to stay profitable through recessions.
  • The ability to quietly compound by reinvesting dividends.
  • Low maintenance ‘set-and-forget’ stocks.

So how does that look in practice?

Boring asset classes to target

First, there are the classic dividend stalwarts: companies that have grown or held dividends steady across many years, typically consumer staples, utilities and healthcare.

Real estate investment trusts (REITs) are another popular choice. Forced to distribute at least 90% of taxable income to shareholders, they’re often high‑yield vehicles for property income.

Instead of owning a single buy‑to‑let, you can effectively own slices of diversified portfolios of commercial and residential assets.

Please note that tax treatment depends on the individual circumstances of each client and may be subject to change in future. The content in this article is provided for information purposes only. It is not intended to be, neither does it constitute, any form of tax advice.

Then there are broad‑market index funds. A low‑cost FTSE 100 tracker, for example, provides instant diversification across large UK companies. That’s about as boring as it gets, which is exactly the point.

One stock that fits the bill

Legal & General Group‘s (LSE: LGEN) a good example of a ‘boring on purpose’ UK income stock. In 2024, it grew core operating profit 6% to about £1.62bn and lifted the annual dividend 5% to 21.36p per share.

Recent data from DividendMax suggests the trailing yield is in the high single digits, roughly around 7.7% to 8%.

Management has highlighted how ageing populations create long‑term demand for pensions and retirement products, calling the ageing population “an obvious set of long‑term, positive drivers for the business”. That helps support highly visible, recurring premium income.

Analysts I reviewed put the average 12‑month price target at about 263.76p, slightly below the current price. That tells me most see it as an income compounder rather than a rocket ship.

Of course, it’s not risk‑free. Profits can swing with insurance accounting rules, and sentiment is sensitive to UK rates and markets. But for pure second‑income potential, it ticks a lot of boxes and could be worth considering.

Spreading the risk

Even with a name like L&G, I’d never want every penny in one business or sector. Pairing a financial giant like this with steady utilities such as National Grid — or a retail giant like Tesco – can spread risk across different cash‑flow engines.

Add a cheap FTSE 100 tracker and maybe a REIT or two, and you’ve quietly built a second income strategy that’s anything but exciting. And that might be exactly why it works…

Should you invest £5,000 in Legal & General Group Plc right now?

When investing expert Mark Rogers and his team have a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Twelfth Magpie Share Advisor newsletter he has run for nearly a decade has provided thousands of paying members with top stock recommendations from the UK and US markets.

And right now, Mark thinks there are 6 standout stocks that investors should consider buying. Want to see if Legal & General Group Plc made the list?


Mark Hartley owns shares in Legal & General, National Grid and Tesco.

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