Holly Cook: Typically an investor will buy a company stock either for its promise of income in the form of a consistent or varying dividend or for its potential for a capital growth. So for example if a stock appears to be undervalued or likely to consistently increase in value over time. But sometimes you can find both qualities in the one company stock.
BHP Billiton (BLT) is one such example, according to Morningstar's mining sector analyst Mark Taylor.
So we typically think of BHP Billiton as being a mining stock, just like Rio Tinto (RIO) or Anglo American and numerous others. But in fact BHP is a rather unique miner according to Mark Taylor, thanks to the company having its foot on a swathe of the world's largest and lowest cost mining assets.
And it's this low cost element to BHP's business that’s one of the factors that underpins Morningstar's narrow economic moat or sustainable competitive advantage, and it's also one of the factors that would support the likelihood of a sustained dividend.
Mark Taylor values the UK list of BHP shares at £21.75, but the stock is down 25% over the last three months. Which means it's currently trading at just two-thirds of that value.
Short term challenges shouldn’t prevent the company from continuing to offer a decent dividend yield, Mark Taylor believes, with the added bonus of potential capital growth at its current share price.