The latest Dividend Dashboard report from AJ Bell, shows:ย
- Total FTSE 100 dividend payments are forecast to grow by 36% this year to ยฃ84.1 billion, a fraction shy of the pre-pandemic peak of ยฃ85.2 billion
- Just ten firms are forecast to generate the majority of this dividend grow, with miners and banks dominating the list
- Rio Tinto is expected to be the indexโs single biggest dividend payer this year with a payout of ยฃ10.8 billion
- Evraz and Rio Tinto are forecast to have the highest dividend yields this year of 17.9% and 17.8% respectively
Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, comments:
โThe FTSE 100 is currently expected to yield 4.1% in 2021, helped by the first year of dividend growth since 2018. The indexโs total dividend pay-out is expected to reach ยฃ84.1 billion in 2021, compared to ยฃ61.8 billion in 2020, an increase of 36%.
โTotal payments peaked at ยฃ85.2 billion in 2018 and 2022 is expected to get tantalisingly close to that mark, at ยฃ85.1 billion, as corporate profits, cash flows and confidence look to recover from the effects of the pandemic.
โDividend forecasts for 2021 have advanced for the fourth quarter in a row, buoyed by more optimistic forecasts for miners in particular. This reflects higher industrial metals prices, although Septemberโs sharp drops in copper and iron ore could potentially put the lid on this positive forecast momentum, should they persist.
โFor the moment, however, dividend payments are seen reaching ยฃ85.1 billion in each of 2022 and 2023. Whatโs more, dividend cover is improving. The aggregate earnings cover ratio for the FTSE 100 is now forecast at 1.77 in 2021, an improvement on 2020โs 1.45 times earnings cover.โ

Majority of dividend growth comes from just ten firms
โJust ten companies are expected to generate 80% of 2021โs dividend increase. Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton are the top two, so income-seekers may be concerned by autumnโs slump in the iron ore price amid concerns over economic growth in China in particular.
โMiners offer five of the six biggest forecast dividend increases in 2021 but that number dwindles to just two in 2022, when reductions at several resources plays hold back the overall forecast for the FTSE 100.โ
Ten biggest forecast dividend increases in 2021
| ย | 2021 E | 2021 E |
| ย | Dividend increase (ยฃ million) | Dividend increase (% FTSE total) |
| Rio Tinto | 6,467 | 28.9% |
| BHP Group | 2,621 | 11.7% |
| Anglo American | 2,492 | 11.2% |
| HSBC | 1,182 | 5.3% |
| Evraz | 1,021 | 4.6% |
| Glencore | 854 | 3.8% |
| Barclays | 840 | 3.8% |
| Lloyds | 838 | 3.7% |
| Royal Dutch Shell | 768 | 3.4% |
| BT | 763 | 3.4% |
Source: Company accounts, Marketscreener, consensus analystsโ forecasts
Company profits forecast to hit record high
โA renewed drop in economic activity could still pose a big risk to dividend forecasts. Analysts currently believe that 2022โs (adjusted) net profits will exceed not only the pre-pandemic peaks of 2018 but the current all-time high of 2011, when commodity prices were roaring higher, and miners and oil producers generated 42% of the FTSE 100โs profits between them.
โMiners, oils and financials are expected to generate more than 80% of 2021โs expected ยฃ128 billion increase in pre-tax income and each of those three is sensitive to global economic growth to some degree or other.
โIf the economy offers little or no assistance โ or even hinders โ then these earnings forecasts, and by extension, dividend payment estimates could find themselves exposed to the downside.โ





