Good Stocks to Buy Now

Recs

10

Put $100,000 into undervalued, dividend-paying stocks today. Through a combination of capital gains and reinvested yields, the market could turn that single lump sum into a $1 million fortune over the next 15 to 20 years.

That's the best advice I can give to a new investor, but it's hard advice to follow. First, $100,000 is not the kind of money folks just have lying around. I know I don't. Second, which stocks would you put it in if you did? There are nearly 3,000 dividend payers trading on the U.S. markets alone, and there's no way to tell at a glance which are good buys.

The good news is that we can work around these limitations.

Invest more
There are fewer barriers to investing today than ever before. Opinions on stocks are a dime a dozen online, and discount brokerages make it possible to buy and sell shares for as little as a few dollars from the comfort of our own homes.

Those are wonderful developments for individuals who seek to build a secure financial future. You don't need $100,000 to start investing. You can start with as little as $350 (the amount needed to keep commissions at 2% on a $7 trade). What kind of returns can you expect from such a small investment?

Good ones.

Constant consistency
Wharton finance professor Jeremy Siegel has demonstrated that it's reasonable to expect a real return of approximately 6.5%. That's Siegel's constant -- and as Siegel told the Fool, he's pretty proud to have a constant named after him. Add inflation to that 6.5%, and you're looking at a nominal return of approximately 9%. Using the nominal rate, the stock market could deliver you a tidy $400,000 nest egg after 25 years of investing $350 each month. Not bad for only $105,000 of principal.

High yields and low prices
The key to earning that return -- as Siegel points out in his research -- is reinvesting dividends. The power of those dividends can be profound.

According to Siegel, the best-performing stock of the original S&P 500, which began in 1957, is Altria and its incredible 19.8% annualized return. Why has it done so well? Reinvested dividends.

Investors' distaste for tobacco, and fear of lawsuits, has kept Altria's price depressed, even while the company continued to pay out huge amounts of cash. (The yield today is 7.6%.) That meant investors could reinvest their dividends at lower prices, thereby supercharging returns.

And the rest of Siegel's S&P best are a pretty good group of dividend payers:

Company

Annual Return (1957-2003)

Current Yield

Altria

19.8%

7.4%

Kroger (NYSE: KR)

14.4%

1.6%

Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG)

14.3%

3%

Hershey (NYSE: HSY)

14.2%

3.2%

Deere (NYSE: DE)

12.8%

2.4%

Pitney Bowes (NYSE: PBI)

12.7%

5.8%

While all of these companies have offered solid returns to investors, the best of the bunch is clearly Altria, which not coincidentally has almost always offered one of the highest yields. As I said before, the key to its incredible return was dividend reinvestment.

The Foolish bottom line
The answer to the "Which stocks?" question for many new investors, then, is easy: companies with above-average yields and below-average prices. Those are exactly the types of companies our Income Investor service is looking for. To see some of their best ideas, click here to grab a 30-day guest pass to Income Investor. There is no obligation to subscribe.

And if you're not in the market at all, consider getting started -- even with only a few hundred dollars. Given depressed stock prices, yields are tantalizingly high right now, and great investors like Warren Buffett have said that their only investing regret is not having started sooner.

Already subscribe to Income Investor? Log in at the top of this page.

This article was originally published on Feb. 10, 2006. It has been updated.

Tim Hanson does not own shares of any company mentioned. P&G is an Income Investor choice. The Motley Fool owns shares of P&G. No Fool is too cool for disclosure.

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 November 05, 2009, at 7:05 PM, UltraContrarian wrote:

    I wonder how much debt Altria had in 1957. How much have their returns (and the rest of the market) been driven by leveraging up, which is impossible to continue indefinitely?

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