Stocks as Good as Gold

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At the very mention of gold, images of value, stability, and growth pop into my head.

It's not hard to understand why. For decades, the precious metal has been marketed as an attractive investment, and a great way to hedge inflation, recession, and almost every other economic bogeyman.

In spite of gold's allure in volatile times such as these, the true long-term performance of gold lags stocks by a significant margin. But investors don't need to give up the shiny lure of stability to earn better returns in stocks. Some stocks out there are as good as gold -- and many are even better.

Chasing shiny trinkets
As a new investor, I was drawn to growth. This led me to buy -- or seriously consider buying -- shares in tech darlings such as Dell (Nasdaq: DELL) and Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) at the height of speculation in 2000. But while these stocks were shinier than gold for a while, the luster soon wore off. Each stock shed more than 50% from its 2000 peak and has struggled to recover since.

These computing stalwarts aren't necessarily poor businesses -- the fundamental conditions just didn't support the share price. I would have been far better off had I understood what demented guru Jeremy Siegel pointed out in his book The Future for Investors: Regular investments in stable, dividend-paying stocks are ultimately the best place for long-term cash.

You can have it all
Dividend payments to shareholders are a significant stabilizing factor in a stock's return. They help smooth out the ups and downs of the market over time, and they indicate that the company is generating cash. Just like gold, steady dividends protect investors from bear markets. But even better than gold, dividends also help boost returns.

For instance, look at the long-haul performance of these dividend-paying stocks:

Company

20-Year Performance

McDonald's (NYSE: MCD)

1,009%

Automatic Data Processing (NYSE: ADP)

1,000%

Boeing (NYSE: BA)

234%

General Electric (NYSE: GE)

369%

Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO)

895%

S&P 500

175%

Gold

140%

Now, lest I be accused of cherry-picking these examples, consider this: The Vanguard Windsor II (VWNFX) fund, our proxy for stocks with above-average yields, returned a market-beating 345% over the trailing 20 years.

Each company above had a long operating history in a relatively stable sector, providing investors a defensive edge with low long-term risk. Even with the dramatic increase in the price of gold in the past few years, the table above shows that dividend-paying stocks leave gold in the dust over extended time frames -- and the difference is even more dramatic as you look at longer time frames.

Consistent dividend payments to shareholders, even during the sort of economic tough times we're enduring today, have made many of these companies long-term winners. This cash yield helps boost shareholder returns in the company, because more shares are purchased when the stock is depressed. One crucial point, though: To realize the full benefits these stocks provide, investors must reinvest the dividends.

Regain your luster
Dividend-paying stocks give investors the ability to survive years of market turmoil, and through reinvesting, to make more money along the way. That's about the best hedge imaginable against economic bogeymen.

With many solid stocks being beaten down with the market, the Motley Fool Income Investor service is awash with great stock ideas. The average recommendation is beating the S&P by two percentage points, while offering more than a 6% yield. Before you cash out your portfolio and stuff it all into gold, click here for a free 30-day trial of the service. There's nothing to lose. I'm betting you'll take a shine to at least a few high-yielding recommendations.

This article was originally published on July 18, 2007. It has been updated.

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Fool contributor Dave Mock still has a soft spot for gold, but satisfies it with dividend stocks. The longtime Fool owns shares of Coca-Cola. Dell and Coca-Cola are Motley Fool Inside Value recommendations. Vanguard Windsor II is a Champion Funds pick. The Motley Fool's disclosure policy is pure 24-karat, through and through.

Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On April 03, 2009, at 9:56 AM, ET114 wrote:

    Dear Fool.com, in my less than humble opinion, the stock market as we knew it will never return... it's a traders world, make money... short selling, profit taking, reutrn of up-tick, etc... which do not equal investments with growth, value, profit, assets, strong balance sheet, etc. I'm into index funds, ETFs and only one stock investment Ford mainly cause they are not TARP'd...

  • Report this Comment On April 03, 2009, at 10:39 AM, JRMtwo wrote:

    The stock market will return if the up-tick rule is restored, naked shorts are made illegal, and the government is forced to stop using its power to control private firms.

    The abuse of government power and the out of control speculators are at the root of the problems in the economy and the stock market. Buying stocks and bonds is risky when the government and the speculators are out of control. No surprise that investors are in cash.

  • Report this Comment On April 03, 2009, at 10:47 AM, maxhoffa wrote:

    the market will return. don't be silly.

  • Report this Comment On April 03, 2009, at 3:55 PM, mikecart1 wrote:

    Saying the market won't return to normal is the same as saying the market will always be like this in the late 1990's when everyone was getting rich, or in 1930 when everyone was poorer than dirt.

    The only guarantee: the market will always change.

    <-- Professional Investor :D

  • Report this Comment On April 04, 2009, at 6:58 AM, belzerlfool wrote:

    Remember Ronald R , George the greater , FDIC went broke and had to print money to pay everyone off , runs on banks , savings and loans going broke ? The auto industry was flat on its face . The average age of the american auto was the highest since the great depression . REAL , unemployment (counting those whos benifits had run out ) was approaching 15% . Now , recall what happend after Clinton came in and calmed everyone down ? The only reason you could not buy one of those giant boats we all yearn for was because there were no placeses left to park one . The stock market created more millionaires than you could count .Remember companys paying electricians $1000.00 signing bonuses ? That is the difference between trickle down economics and bubble up . If you don't get in this market right now , you truly are not a fool . I just doubled my money on Ford and because I jumped a little to soon , I am only up a dollar on caterpillar but watch what happens in the next 10 months . We have been here before you fool . I think this is the chance of a lifetime and I am in 100% . The day of the megga rich getting all the money is over for a while . George is gone . He took very good care of his supporters . I applaude him . The only problem was that I was not in his circle of friends .For the next eight years , it is our turn to have some fun . GOD , I wish I had more money to invest . This is not politics ,,,, just history .

  • Report this Comment On April 06, 2009, at 1:30 PM, Stocklovr wrote:

    We really have only two methods to answer the question "Will the market ever come back?"

    First, we can use a crystal ball an hope to see the future.

    Second, we can look at history.

    I'm certainly not betting on the first one. As far as history is concerned, just think about these historical events:

    1) Prior to 2007: World War I, Great Depression, World Way II, Cold War, Asian Financial Crisis, Korea, Vietnam, Gulf War, Iraq, S&L fiasco, Inflation in the 70s, on and on...

    2) Stock Market surpasses 14,000 in October 2007.

    Somehow, through it all, the DOW hit an all-time high in 2007.

    I once read that the most dangerous statement to make when referring to the stock market is: "Yes, but it's different this time (because -insert reason here-)."

    Slvr

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