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Hot Tip for Stocks Over the Long Term


The Machine
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A simple idea for big long-term returns from big-name stocks...
 
WHAT'S the most important idea I've discovered in finance? asks Porter Stansberry, head of the Stansberry & Associates research group, in Daily Wealth.
 
What's the one thing I'm going to teach my kids beyond the obvious stuff about saving, compounding, and risk management? What do I believe is the real secret to investment success? And how do I invest my own money in securities?
 
Over the long sweep of your investing lifetime, strategies that only work extremely well in certain market situations are unlikely to play a dominant role. The big secret therefore is something you can use all the time, for your entire life, as an investor. And here it is:
Some companies are much better than others at compounding capital. Much better. 

If your goal as an investor is to compound your savings over time, wouldn't it be easier to simply figure out which companies will compound your capital at an acceptable rate, buy those firms (and only those firms) at reasonable prices, and then do something else with the rest of your time?
 
Here's a simple, but powerful example...
 
Well-run insurance companies can produce what's called an "underwriting profit." They are literally paid money in advance to manage your capital. And they get to keep not only the investment profits, but profits from the premiums, too.
 
That's like paying the bank to keep and use your money. No other business can compound capital so consistently.
 
Insurance companies have other fantastic advantages, too. They're able to legally defer most of their taxes. They're nearly immune from economic factors. They're scalable. I could go on...
 
They're a focus for us because well-run insurance companies are legendary compounders of capital. Buy them at reasonable prices, and it's impossible not to do well.
 
In the March 2012 issue of my Investment Advisory, we explained that insurance stocks had rarely been cheaper. We recommended several through the year. Since then, stocks of all stripes have exploded higher...but they haven't outpaced insurance companies. Insurance stocks as a whole – as measured by the SPDR S&P Insurance Fund (KIE) – have far outpaced the S&P 500.
 
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It's not an accident that the greatest investor in history, Warren Buffett, has long focused on insurance stocks and other companies that are highly capital efficient. That is, companies that are natural wealth-compounders.
 
Starting with his 1972 investment in See's Candies, Buffett gradually over the years shifted the bulk of his wealth into a simple, long-term compounding strategy...
 
While Buffett didn't abandon all other forms of investing, his largest allocations since 1972 have all used this compounding strategy. That famously includes his 1988 purchase of Coca-Cola...when Buffett put roughly 25% of Berkshire's capital into a single stock! And it wasn't a cheap stock, either. At the time, Coke was trading for 16 times its annual earnings. Buffett had figured out the one, real secret of finance...the one secret to "rule them all."
 
To use a long-term, compounding strategy effectively, you really only have to answer three questions.
  • First, is the company in question able to produce very high returns on its assets? In other words, is it a great business?
  • Second, are these unusually high returns very likely to continue for decades, without requiring large and ongoing capital investments?
  • Third, can the management of the company be trusted? Will bankruptcy never be even a remote possibility?
If the answer to these questions is "yes", then all you have to do is simply not pay too much when you buy the stock.
 
Most of the companies that fit these criteria are branded consumer-products companies – stocks like McDonald's, Coke, Heinz, and Hershey.
 
Buffett explained in his 1983 shareholder letter how he thinks about these companies. The secret to their long-term earnings power is very simple: It's their brand and the relatively unchanging nature of their products. These companies' products are so well-known (and adored) by customers that these firms can constantly raise prices to keep pace with inflation.
 
Meanwhile, the brands – while requiring some advertising – aren't like factories, gold mines, or drugs...
 
They don't require massive investments of new capital. There's no new gold mine to find and build. There's no patent that's going to expire. And there's not even any new product that must be created: Coke's fans went crazy with anger when the company tried to change its product in a small way back in 1985.
 
All these firms have to do is continue to deliver the same thing, year after year. And that means they can afford to return huge amounts of capital to shareholders.
 
Merely buying and holding any of the stocks I mentioned above would have made you 15% a year if you'd just reinvested the dividends for the last 30 years. Even if all you did was invest $10,000 and then nothing else – not a penny more – you'd still end up with $575,000 at the end of 30 years. If you invested $10,000 annually, you'd end up with $4.3 million.
 
And the best part? This approach can be used by anyone.
 
The math is simple. And is it really that hard to realize that Heinz is the best sauce company...that Coke is the leading soft-drink business...or that McDonald's makes the best hamburgers for kids?
 
The No. 1 objection I get from readers when I talk about this strategy is: "That's great, Porter. Wish I'd known about that when I was 25. But it's too late for me now. I don't have 30 years."
 
That's nonsense. Think about it this way...Buffett was born in 1930. He didn't buy Coke until 1987. He was 57 years old. It has been one of the greatest investments of his life – bar none.
 
If that doesn't convince you, just think about it this way. How often do you make more than 15% on your portfolio in a year? Whether you've got three decades to invest or only one, you should aim to produce the highest possible annual return without putting your capital at undue risk.
 
There's no safer investment approach than this one, as your returns are being manufactured by great businesses. You don't need a "greater fool" to pay too much for your shares to make a profit. In fact...The biggest risk you face is selling at all because that will trigger taxes (in most accounts).
 
I've written entire issues of my newsletter about this strategy. I've recommended several stocks using this approach. These companies all produce something akin to financial anti-gravity: They earn more and more money, year after year.
 
It's this seemingly invisible power that allows them to return massive amounts of capital to shareholders, a factor that sets them apart and greatly reduces investor reliance on capital gains. This is incredibly important over the long term.

 

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