LONDON - British investors are set to see a modest improvement in dividends in 2010 after hefty cuts last year, as companies have less need to hoard cash with earnings beginning to recover, Capita Registrars Dividend Monitor said.


Capita Registrars, which provides share registration and is a unit of Capita Group
British corporates cut dividends by 10 billion pounds, or 15 percent, to 56.9 billion last year, according to a report from Capita Registrars, with banks, the hardest hit by the financial crisis, slashing payouts by 6.1 billion.
"The growth (in 2010) will be tepid at best," it said.
"The banking sector is likely to make a contribution to the improvement but it will not return to dominate the dividend scene for a long time yet."
British companies also raised 73 billion pounds in new equity -- far more than the dividend payouts.
"It is no wonder dividend payments have collapsed so dramatically. It would make little sense to pay out dividends, on which most investors must pay tax, only to demand the same money back as part of a rights issue," said Paul Taylor, head of dividends at Capita Registrars.
The report said oil and gas producers, mainly BP
The sector contributed more than a quarter of the dividend paid to investors last year, but growth may slow because of the outlook on crude prices, Capita Registrars said.
Last week, Royal Dutch Shell posted a 75 percent fall in fourth-quarter profit to $1.18 billion, while BP reported a lower than forecast 33 percent rise in fourth-quarter replacement cost profit.


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