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This Week’s Top Blue-Chip Income Buy: British American Tobacco plc

G A Chester rates British American Tobacco plc (LON:BATS) as a great buy for dividend investors today.

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I’m always on the lookout for big FTSE 100 companies when they’re being offered in the market at an attractive valuation for dividend investors. A little higher yield at the time you buy can make a big difference to the growth of your income stream over the long term. Right now, I reckon British American Tobacco (LSE: BATS) (NYSE: BTI.US) is looking a great buy for income.

Emerging markets

British American Tobacco (BAT) sailed through the financial crisis and recession, continuing its long record of annual double-digit earnings increases. However, earnings growth moderated to 6% last year, and analysts see a rise of the same order this year.

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Companies such as BAT, with their growth engines in emerging markets, have come under pressure lately, due to concerns about less dynamic growth in these developing regions. BAT’s shares are 5% below the level they were at three months ago, and 12% down on their high for the year.

A great opportunity right now

At the time of writing, BAT is trading at 3,322p and the trailing 12-month dividend yield has risen to 4.1%. As a result of the weakness of the shares in recent weeks, you have to go back to last year to find the market offering BAT on as high a trailing yield.

The company’s current 6% rate of earnings-per-share (EPS) growth may be lower than in past, but it is, nevertheless, sufficient to support dividend increases comfortably ahead of inflation — and to extend BAT’s history of delivering a real rising income every year since at least the turn of the millennium.

Looking ahead, analysts are expecting BAT to increase this year’s dividend by 6.6% and are forecasting 7.7% growth in both EPS and the dividend for 2014. The forward 12-month yield works out at 4.6%, over a percentage point ahead of the FTSE 100 average.

I don’t believe the long-term story of emerging-markets growth has terminally stalled. I feel confident that BAT — the most international of tobacco companies — will continue to benefit from increasing wealth and brand consciousness among consumers in developing economies. Hence, with the recent share-price weakness pushing up the dividend yield, I rate BAT a great buy for long-term income investors right now.

> G A Chester does not own any shares mentioned in this article.

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