Iām beginning to think Glencore (LSE: GLEN) shares have a grudge against me.
Maybe Iām paranoid, but theyāve inflicted so much damage on my self-invested personal pension, Iām convinced theyāre out to blight my retirement.
Theyāre not my worst performer. Aston Martin and Ocado Group having inflicted even more misery. But I donāt take that personally. Those two play twisted mind games with every investor.
I accept that others are suffering at the hands of the Glencore share price. Itās down 14.5% over the last 12 months. But my personal loss has now topped 30%. Why do they hate me so?
Can this FTSE 100 stock show me some love?
All Iāve done is shower Glencore with love and admiration. Iāve written several articles praising the FTSE 100 mining and commodities trading giant.Ā
I said its troubles arenāt its fault. Itās all down to China buying less of its production as the worldās second biggest economy slows.
Iāve talked up its prospects ā once China revives, the global economy recovers and the green transition boosts demand for lithium, copper, manganese and rare earths.
Iāve tried to see the positives of holding Glencore shares, such as the dividend. Iāve even overlooked the fact that the trailing yield has slumped to 2.47%, so Iām pinning my hopes on getting a bumper āspecialā in the spring.
My reward? The Glencore share price dropped another 10% in the last month. Okay, so thatās not as bad as Aston Martin and Ocado, down 20% and 16%, respectively. Like I said, I knew what I was letting myself in for with those two.
On 19 February, the Glencore board pulled out the big one. It announced that it was considering swapping its primary London listing for New York, or anywhere else it can āget the right valuationā, according to chief executive Gary Nagle.
Thatās all the rage today, threatening poor beleaguered London, while gushing about how much greener the grass looks Stateside.
If Nagle was hoping it would lift the share price, he was disappointed. Instead, it plunged. If even the New York magic trick doesnāt work for Glencore, what will?
It didnāt help that at the same time, Nagle unveiled a sharp drop in its annual core earnings, amid weaker coal prices.
Iām looking forward to some dividends now
Analysts knew Glencoreās adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation would fall. They expected $14.55bn. Instead, they got $14.36bn, a 16% drop year on year. Listing in rainy London had nothing to do with that.
The Glencore share price continues to persecute me but at least Iāll be getting more dividends soon.
The board is going to pay out $1.2bn together with a ātop-upā buyback of $1bn before first-half results on 6 August. At that point shareholders can expect further returns, as Nagle divvies up a healthy $4.8bn of free cash flow.
Thatās something to hang my hat on. Iāve no idea when the share price will stop tormenting me. It could take months, maybe years. But at least Glencore is giving me a reason to stick around. Unless itās playing me for a sucker again.
This post was originally published on Motley Fool