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Undervalued stocks that deliver decent income
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May 25, 2021 8.30pm
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With interest rates paid on bank deposits at record lows, self-funded retirees who need to generate income to maintain their living standards have been forced to take on more risk with their capital. In most cases, that means buying shares.
However, which stocks still pay good income while maintaining a margin of price safety as the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index hovers around its record high in a market stretched by high valuations?
One way to boost income is with high-yielding shares, but beware the traps
Undervalued stocks that deliver decent income
We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later.
Dismiss
May 25, 2021 10.30pm
Normal text size
Advertisement
With interest rates paid on bank deposits at record lows, self-funded retirees who need to generate income to maintain their living standards have been forced to take on more risk with their capital. In most cases, that means buying shares.
However, which stocks still pay good income while maintaining a margin of price safety as the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index hovers around its record high in a market stretched by high valuations?
One way to boost income is with high-yielding shares, but beware the traps
14 May 2021
Frustration is mounting at the high degree of difficulty of connecting big batteries to Australia’s grid, with one renewables developer reportedly lamenting that the only tougher market for large-scale energy storage might be the Moon.
That comment, which came from an unnamed source, was related to RenewEconomy this week by Matt Penfold, an Australian who currently works from the US as vice president of commercial on the digital team at energy storage technology and bidding software leader Fluence.
The sentiment mirrors the exasperation expressed, also this week, by the head of one of Australia’s leading renewable energy developers, Tilt Renewables, at his company’s inability to obtain approval to add a big battery to one of its operating wind farms in South Australia. See: “I don’t get it: Why an old wind farm is unable to add a new big battery
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On May 13 last year, in the House of Representatives, Bob Katter started rapping.
âCough up, cough up the money; make money, make money,â he chanted during a question in question time that was really a plug for a pet project, a giant electricity line stretching across northern Queensland.
Treasurer Josh Frydenberg and Energy Minister Angus Taylor both got the joke â and the message.
Katter, who is becoming more powerful by the month, wants the government to provide subsidised finance for CopperString 2.0, a $1.7 billion transmission line that would connect the inland mining town of Mount Isa to the national electricity market near Townsville.