Jubaks on MSN-The 50 Best Stocks in the World To build a portfolio for the long haul, focus on traits that give stocks extended shelf life -- global reach, competitive advantage, an indestructible brand name. Here are my favorites. By Jim Jubak
In my last column I argued that economic trends are dividing the big international consumer-goods companies into two groups. Those like Coca-Cola (KO) and Gillette (G) have the clout to control their markets. A second tier of companies, however, is at the mercy of retailers and distributors -- even though they own recognizable brand names. In the future, I said, the rich would get richer -- in the form of bigger profit margins -- and the also-rans would get squeezed. You don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out what group of companies to invest in.
The more I think about that analysis, the more it makes sense to me to extend it to the rest of the world economy. The increasingly global market for computers, insurance, pharmaceuticals, cement and automobiles, to take just a few examples, gives a big edge to companies that have invested in creating global brand names, global distribution networks, world-class manufacturing systems, or industry-leading technology. Companies with one or more of those competitive advantages should reap extra profits as they expand into newly opened markets and bury inefficient competitors. A portfolio of these global winners should, over the long haul, earn better-than-market returns with below-market risk -- my favorite combination.
Here's my cut at putting together such a portfolio. Call it the "50 Best Stocks in the World." (I delivered a version of this article in a workshop by that name at the Seattle Money Show two days ago.) I'm sure you'll disagree with at least some of the picks. You'll probably have your own candidates for the list -- and be outraged that I left a favorite off. Let the debate begin!
But first, let's set some ground rules. These 50 stocks aren't those that I'd buy today for the greatest return over the next year. You can certainly find rockets that will outperform most of these companies over that time period. By their nature these are big, relatively mature companies -- you won't find many growing at 25% a year on this list. Instead, think of this as a list of global blue chips -- stocks that you can buy and put away for 10 years with faith that when you look at them again at the end of a decade, they will still be in business and will have outperformed the market averages.
A hot product isn't the ticket to membership in this club either. Instead, I've looked for companies with a sustainable global competitive advantage. The kind of advantage that I've looked for varies by industry. In consumer goods it can be a recognized brand name, backed up by an efficient distribution system. That adds up to the kind of market share that can keep competitors almost indefinitely at bay. Kellogg (K), for example, controls about 55% of the European market for ready-to-eat cereal, according to Morgan Stanley, as well as 58% of the Asia/Pacific market and 74% of the Latin American market. At Intel (INTC), on the other hand, competitive advantage is the result of years of research and development that have produced a measurable technology gap between the company and its competitors. At Wal-Mart (WMT), the company's edge comes from years spent developing systems for delivering goods, controlling inventory, and squeezing the last penny out of margins. In each case, I've looked for advantages that have taken years of time and billions in investment to create. These 50 companies will collect rent on that investment for years to come.
(Credit where credit is due: My starting point for my search was a great Morgan Stanley research report, called "Global Investing: The Competitive Edge," that combed the global economy looking for companies with competitive advantage. But I'm to blame for the contents of this portfolio. After adding my own analysis, I produced a list that differs in significant ways from Morgan Stanley's own conclusions.)
Okay, now onto the list itself.
I divide these 50 into four groups:
1.The usual suspects. Come on, are you really surprised to see American International Group (AIG), Applied Materials (AMAT) , Avon (AVP), Boeing (BA), British Airways (BAB), British Petroleum (BP), Cisco (CSCO), Coca-Cola, Compaq (CPQ), Disney (DIS), Federal Express (FDX), General Electric (GE), Gillette, Hewlett-Packard (HWP), Honda (HMC), Intel, Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), Kellogg, Mattel (MAT), Microsoft (MSFT), Nike (NKE), Oracle (ORCL), Pfizer (PFE), Philip Morris (MO), Procter & Gamble (PG), Sony (SNE), Toyota (TOYOY) and Wal-Mart on this list? Even if you don't follow each company's industry, you still know that these are the stars of the global economy. No car company, for example, can match Toyota's manufacturing efficiency and its penetration of the entire globe's auto markets. (Although Honda gives the company a run for its money.)
2.The undeservedly obscure. If they didn't operate in unfamiliar industries or from unfamiliar parts of the world (to U.S. investors, that is), these companies would easily fall into the first group. Two European companies, Holderbank (HFGCY) and Lafarge (LFGEY), rank No.1 and No. 2 in the U.S. cement market. Auto-seat and interior maker Lear (LEA) is using its manufacturing efficiencies to grab share in the rapidly growing auto-parts market, where more and more auto builders buy components from outside suppliers that they once built themselves. Monsanto (MTC) controls a portfolio of patents that give it a commanding lead in the production of genetically-engineered seed. Nucor (NUE) and Pohang Iron & Steel (PKX) are the most efficient steel makers in their home markets, and are increasingly looking overseas for new markets. Other companies I'd put in this group are Asia Pulp & Paper (PAP), Caterpillar (CAT), News Corp. (NWS), Reuters (RTRSY), Samsung (SMSUF) and Unilever (UL).
3.The up-and-comers. These companies have built important competitive advantages, but have just begun to apply it. Home Depot (HD), for example, has learned how to dominate the home-improvement market in the U.S. and is just now taking that expertise overseas. WorldCom (WCOM), with or without MCI (MCIC), now owns critical parts of the Internet infrastructure that give the company the lead in the global race to integrate voice and data networks. Other companies in this category are Citibank (CCI), Enron (ENE), Sealed Air (SEE), and The Gap (GPS).
4.The temporarily out of favor. The kind of competitive global advantage I'm talking about here doesn't disappear overnight. From previous columns you know that I'm not -- how shall I put it? -- overly fond of McDonald's (MCD) and Time Warner (TWX). But these companies control globally-known brand names to which better management will someday return their old luster. Glaxo Wellcome (GLX) is facing product-transition problems with Zantac, but it owns impressive expertise in developing and marketing drugs. Toys 'R' Us (TOY) probably doesn't get as much credit for its international prospects as it should because of trouble with its U.S. operation.
Scanning through the list of 50, certain themes jump out at me. For example, U.S. companies dominate the portfolio. Partly, that's a result of an emphasis at U.S. firms on building global brand names. Partly, I think it's because the U.S. domestic market is the most competitive in the world, and that gives U.S. firms a big head start as the international economy becomes increasingly competitive in industry after industry.
More companies make the list because of their competitive advantage in distribution than because of an edge in technology. Avon is a master at direct marketing. Caterpillar's strength is an incredibly loyal and widespread distribution network. The Gap, Home Depot, Toys 'R' Us and Wal-Mart all earn their place because they've pioneered new ways to sell. Such drug companies as Pfizer and Glaxo are on this list because of the efficient structure they've built up for guiding a promising drug from trials to patients. With the big players in the pharmaceutical industry likely to buy as many or more drugs from biotech startups as they invent in-house, distribution is probably more important in this industry than research-and-development budgets.
I'm only actively buying one stock on this list right now -- Sealed Air.
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I wouldn't rush right out and buy the stocks in this portfolio. Most are currently fully or even over-priced. Instead I suggest that you use it, as I've used a list like this for the last few years, to guide a very long-term buying strategy. These blue chips have exactly the combination of above-steady-market return and lower-than-market risk that I'd love in a portfolio at my retirement about 20 years from now. With, I hope, a decade or two of travel and puttering to finance at that point, I certainly don't intend to put my nest egg in bonds. Instead, I'd like to be checking on the progress of Intel and Sealed Air and Johnson & Johnson.
So I'm in no hurry to buy, and I can wait for the dips that even stocks like these suffer. I picked up shares in Hewlett-Packard last year when the company's earnings disappointed short-term investors. I bought Home Depot this year when the analysts on Wall Street started to dither that a company with almost no international presence had run out of growth opportunities. I own shares in Intel, Reuters and Cisco, all picked up when those stocks looked weak. And I add to these positions when the opportunity offers.
I'm only actively buying one stock on this list right now. Sealed Air's acquisition of the packaging business of W.R. Grace makes this stock extremely attractive. The argument is very straightforward: Give Sealed Air's superb management -- the company has been able to wring a 9.3% net profit out of sales -- an additional $2.5 billion in sales to work with and watch the earnings fly. Not only should Sealed Air get more profit out of Grace's operations than Grace could, but the new business speeds the company's entry into overseas markets -- and also gives Sealed Air a dominant position in the food-packaging industry. And that's likely to be a big growth business as consumers from Rio to Bombay buy more packaged foodstuffs. I bought my first shares at $52 about a month ago. The stock is slightly more expensive now, but still reasonably priced, given the company's growth prospects.
I might sell in about 40 years or so.
New Developments on Past Columns:
Companies on the Couch
The fix is taking longer than expected at Informix (IFMXE), a stock that I first wrote about in my Aug. 5 column, "Companies on the Couch", and then recommended for purchase in the update to my Aug. 12 column, "It's a Wireless World." At the end of September, the company announced that it needs until November to complete its audit and restatement of 1996 revenue. Even more daunting, the company also said for the first time that the restatement would include 1995 revenue. Because of Informix's delay in filing its second-quarter financials, the Nasdaq has initiated delisting procedures on the stock. There's no doubt that these developments are serious. A restatement that was expected to require adjustments in the range of $70 million to $100 million is now likely to reach $200 million in revenue. However, I don't expect the company to be delisted by Nasdaq and I think that most Informix customers are sitting tight. Fixing the mess at Informix will clearly take longer than I thought and the restatement will certainly be shockingly large, but I still think the company is a good turnaround play. |