With a £20K ISA, an investor could earn £1,500 a year from FTSE 100 shares

One of the things I like about a Stocks and Shares ISA is that it allows me to build up passive income streams that hopefully can keep flowing year after year. That can be while sticking to proven blue-chip FTSE 100 businesses.
As an example of this approach, here is how an investor with £20K could target a £1,500 annual passive income stream.
Getting the right ISA
The first move would be to select the optimal Stocks and Shares ISA.
There are lots of options available on the market and each investor has their own particular needs, so it makes sense to pay attention to what is on offer.
Even small-seeming fees and costs can add up – and eat into passive income!
Building an income stream
To generate £1,500 each year in passive income from a £20K ISA would require a 7.5% yield. That is over double the average FTSE 100 yield at the moment.
One approach would be to invest at a lower yield and compound the dividends for a few years until the target was achieved.
But in the current market, I do not think it is necessary for an investor to wait like that. I reckon they could realistically aim to achieve a 7.5% yield from the start, buying a diversified portfolio of blue-chip shares.
As that is an average, if some shares yield less it would be fine, as long as the average was balanced out by other higher-yielding ones.
Three shares to consider
As an example, here are three FTSE 100 shares I think investors could consider as part of such an approach.
Legal & General is a financial services powerhouse with a long history – and hopefully a long future ahead of it too.
It benefits from a strong brand, resilient customer demand and large existing client base. The sale of a big US business does bring a risk of lower earnings in future, though in the short term the cash proceeds should help support the beefy dividend and share buyback programme.
Legal & General yields 8.8%.
Secondly, M&G is another FTSE 100 financial services name with a chunky yield.
It yields 10.3% and the asset manager recently increased the annual payout per share.
It also has a strong brand and customer base in the millions, though one risk is that clients pulling out more funds than they put in will hurt profits.
A third share to consider is insurer Aviva (LSE: AV).
Its 6.4% yield is below the target I mentioned above, though as I explained, it could be part of a portfolio that still achieves that target overall.
Insurance benefits from large, resilient demand. Aviva is a massive force in the UK insurance sector and is set to grow further with its acquisition of rival Direct Line.
That risks distracting management attention, not least because Direct Line’s business has been struggling in recent years.
But it should offer Aviva even greater economies of scale. Meanwhile, Aviva has a large customer base, proven business model and clearly defined strategy. I see those as assets.
The FTSE 100 firm did cut its dividend in 2020 but since then the payout per share has been growing handily.
The post With a £20K ISA, an investor could earn £1,500 a year from FTSE 100 shares appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.
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More reading
- Up 125% in 5 years and yielding 6.5%! Are Aviva shares the FTSE’s best all-rounder?
- £10,000 in savings? Here’s how an investor could target a £1,357 monthly passive income
- As the ISA deadline looms, here are 2 dividend-paying stocks I have been loading up on
- Here’s how I’d invest my £20k Stocks & Shares ISA allowance to target a £7,326 passive income
- A 6.4% yield but up 25% from last April, are Aviva shares worth me buying now?
C Ruane has no position in any of the shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has recommended M&g Plc. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.