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Strategies & Market Trends : Range Bound & Undervalued Quality Stocks

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To: JakeStraw who wrote (5475)2/11/2004 2:41:18 PM
From: Neil H  Read Replies (1) of 5499
 
Here is one that fits this thread. I have owned it before and looking at it again. Probably a safe bet for the future.

SLE

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Stocks Fools Love: Sara Lee

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By Mathew Emmert (TMF Gambit)
February 9, 2004

Sara Lee (NYSE: SLE)
Trading at $21.18 as of 2/6/04

This article is part of our annual Stocks Fools Love Valentine's Day special. Join us for more Stocks Fools Love here.

If your idea of a good time is sitting around in your undergarments eating pie and collecting dividend checks, you've come to the right investment. As they say, nobody doesn't like Sara Lee (NYSE: SLE), and we income-investing folk stand to benefit a great deal from that fact.

I recently recommended this company to subscribers of our dividend-oriented investment newsletter, Motley Fool Income Investor, and the shares still present an excellent value.

Sara Lee is like the General Electric (NYSE: GE) of consumer products. Its wide array of products compete not only with Kraft (NYSE: KFT) and ConAgra (NYSE: CAG), but Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG) and Colgate-Palmolive (NYSE: CL). The company is segmented into three main operating units: Food and Beverage, Household, and Intimates and Underwear. This may not sound like the most glamorous stuff in the world -- well, except perhaps for the underwear -- but it's very profitable when you're as innovative as these folks.

Certainly, most of us know Sara Lee makes a mean apple pie and a scrumptious cheesecake, but there's a lot more to this company than dessert. You can also count yourself a customer if you start your day with a cup of Pickwick Tea or Hills Bros. coffee, or toasted Earth Grains bread with a side of Hillshire Farm or Jimmy Dean sausage. Indeed, it's virtually impossible to walk down a Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT) aisle and not see dozens of Sara Lee products.

From frozen bagels and Ball Park Franks to Underalls and Wonderbras, this company seems to have a leg in just about everything (including Sheer Energy and L'eggs stockings). Ever heard of Bali, Champion, Barely There, Hanes and Hanes Her Way, Playtex, or Unno? All are market-leading product lines.

Buy the numbers
Sara Lee is several years into a restructuring that's beginning to pay off. Earnings per share (EPS) will increase in the 5% range for fiscal 2004, boosted by share repurchases, and I believe long-term earnings will grow at a near 10% clip. Sara also generates mountains of free cash flow (FCF).

If that isn't enough to make your mouth water, consider the company's delectable 3.55% dividend yield. Sara Lee is clearly committed to creating shareholder value via its payout, which it demonstrated last August when it increased its dividend by 21%. That's tasty, but it gets even yummier: Sara Lee has paid a dividend since 1946 -- that's 58 years for those of you playing along at home.

The Foolish bottom line
Let's face it. There's quite a bit of economic diversity in underwear and pumpkin pie. When you couple that with Sara Lee's substantial FCF, you've got a nice security blanket wrapped around a diverse international powerhouse of consumer brands. Even if economic weakness rears its head again, investors will be well paid while they wait for a turnaround.

Trading at less than 13.5 times FCF and less than 13 times forward earnings, the company's shares are about as cheap as a mud pie (fortunately, they're for buying, not for eating). At that price, you can snatch up a decent position and still have money left over for some real junk food -- like those little Valentine hearts with the messages printed on them. Bon appetit.
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