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This Week’s Top Blue-Chip Income Buy: BAE Systems plc

G A Chester rates BAE Systems plc (LON:BA) 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 BAE Systems (LSE: BA) (NASDAQOTH: BAESY.US) is looking a great buy for income.

XXX

BAE hasn’t been immune to government cuts in UK and US defence budgets. Nevertheless, the company has an order backlog representing over two years of sales; and, in the absence of a magic wand to end human conflict the world over, I expect demand for BAE’s products to continue well into the future.

A great opportunity right now

The table below shows the five biggest FTSE defence and aerospace firms ranked by trailing 12-month dividend yield.

  Market cap Recent share price Dividend yield
BAE £15bn 457p 4.3%
Cobham £3bn 284p 3.2%
Meggitt £4bn 516p 2.4%
Ultra Electronics £1bn 1,951p 2.1%
Rolls-Royce £23bn 1,210p 1.7%

In what is a low-income sector, BAE’s yield stands out like an aircraft carrier in Regent’s Park lake.

It is the board’s policy to pay dividends in line with “long-term sustainable cover of around two times underlying earnings”. For 2012, BAE delivered a 19.5p dividend, twice covered by underlying earnings per share (EPS) of 38.9p.

In a trading update last month, management told us that “double-digit growth in underlying earnings per share is anticipated for 2013” — guidance that assumes a satisfactory completion before the year end to negotiations on the pricing of a Saudi Arabia jet fighter contract. If negotiations were to go beyond the end of the year, EPS for 2013 “would be impacted by approximately 6 to 7 pence”.

Assuming dividend cover of two, the former case would give us a full-year dividend of around 21.5p (+10%) and the latter would give us a dividend of around 18p, which would represent an 8% cut.

Whatever the outcome, I’m certain in my own mind that we won’t see a dividend as high as 21.5p or as low as 18p. The board lifted this year’s interim dividend by 2.6%, and I can see an inflation-pacing full-year dividend — say 20p — whether the Saudi negotiations are concluded or not. Such a payout would imply dividend cover of 2.1 or 1.8 depending on which outcome prevails — both numbers being within the cover policy of around two times underlying earnings.

The defence and aerospace sector provides useful diversification. I rate BAE, with its current sector-leading 4.3% yield, as 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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