Recs

14

These Stocks Are Growth Traps

When one of the best and brightest investors in academia speaks, you better believe I listen. That's why, when Jeremy Siegel, author of Stocks For The Long Run, said that companies that experience rapid growth often don't generate good returns for investors, I stepped back and did a double take. Isn't that what we're always looking for: Companies that can grow, expand, and increase revenues and earnings? According to Siegel -- not really.

Don't fall for it
Siegel thinks that trailblazing stocks often do much worse than the plain-vanilla stocks in which no one is interested. Evaluating history, he says, "Although the earnings, sales and even market values of the new firms grew faster than those of the older firms, the price investors paid for these stocks was simply too high to generate good returns." These stocks are growth traps, in other words.

OK -- so we have to avoid companies trading at outrageously high levels, and particularly ones in uncertain industries, where potential growth is questionable. So scooping up shares of Las Vegas Sands (NYSE: LVS  ) or Baidu.com (Nasdaq: BIDU  ) , two companies with undecided futures and forward price-to-earnings ratios greater than 40, is not Siegel's idea of a good investment. In fact, he says that "higher prices mean lower dividend yields, and therefore fewer shares accumulated through reinvesting dividends."

The bottom line is that investors often expect a company to experience excessive growth, so they're willing to pay a very high premium for good companies with debatable growth. This, in essence, is what Siegel calls "the growth trap." This is what you need to avoid.

The critical factor
According to Siegel, there is but one critical factor when it comes to investing for the long run. Favor dividend-paying stocks, and reinvest those dividends. To illustrate his point, Siegel uses an example of two opposing investments.

Consider an investor who put $1,000 in IBM in 1950, and another investor who put $1,000 in Standard Oil. Over the next 53 years, IBM was the winner -- dramatically beating Standard Oil in per-share revenue growth and earnings. However, shareholders from Standard Oil were the ultimate champions. Why? IBM's average dividend yield was 2.18% and it sold for 26.76 times earnings, while Standard Oil's average dividend yield was 5.19% and it sold for 12.97 times earnings. The higher dividend yield allowed shareholders who reinvested the dividends to accumulate more shares, which caused returns to multiply. The difference: Standard Oil shareholders ended up with almost a quarter of a million dollars more than IBM shareholders.

Siegel found that over the same time period, the best-performing stocks were companies with strong dividends -- for example, Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG  ) or Abbot Laboratories (NYSE: ABT  ) . Both of these companies have one very important trait in common -- they've been paying consistent dividends for more than 80 years. In fact, both have increased dividends for more than 35 years. That, according to Siegel, is another important factor.

Triumph with simplicity
It's difficult not to get wrapped up in new industry stocks. They're exciting; you envision yourself investing in the next eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY  ) , Research In Motion (Nasdaq: RIMM  ) , or Green Mountain Coffee Roasters (Nasdaq: GMCR  ) , and it's hard to resist the temptation. They're good companies that may very well outperform over the long term. But Siegel clearly advocates looking for the boring companies with low price-to-earnings ratios and high dividend yields -- traditional firms that collect trash, pump oil, or market soft drinks and chips.

For example, here are some lesser-known stocks that currently have manageable payout ratios and P/E profiles similar to those of Procter & Gamble and Abbot Labs:

Company

Dividend Yield

Dividend Payout Ratio

Forward P/E Ratio

Innophos Holdings

2.8%

6%

11.2

Koppers Holdings

3.1%

8%

10.9

Diageo

4.2%

55%

12.8

Data from Yahoo! Finance.

These companies pay great dividends, trade cheaply, and sport extremely reasonable payout ratios that indicate they're not vulnerable to future dividend cuts. Too high of a payout ratio is dangerous; should a company's earnings decrease unexpectedly, it may have to cut dividends. Companies try like heck not to do this, because it makes investors and analysts panic. 

Additionally, these are predictable, essential companies. They produce phosphates for food production; manufacture commercial wood treatments for the chemical, railroad, and steel industries; and distribute spirits, beer, and wine. While I always suggest doing more due diligence before drawing a conclusion about any stock, I can definitely say these are not the types of companies that fall into the "growth trap" category.

Just like Siegel, our analysts at Income Investor look for a few simple attributes. They buy cheap. They buy reputable companies. And most importantly, they reinvest dividends. And ultimately, they've proved successful: Since inception, our team is beating the S&P by more than seven percentage points.

If you're interested in seeing all of our past and present recommendations, plus the seven stocks we think you should "buy first," click here for more information. We're offering a free 30-day trial. There's no obligation to subscribe.

Already a member of Income Investor? Log in at the top of this page.

This article was originally published Nov. 7, 2009. It has been updated.

Fool contributor Jordan DiPietro owns no shares of the companies above, but loves seeing his dividends accumulate more shares. Baidu and Green Mountain Coffee Roasters are Motley Fool Rule Breakers selections. eBay is a Motley Fool Stock Advisor recommendation. Procter & Gamble is a Motley Fool Income Investor pick. Motley Fool Options recommended a bull call spread on eBay. The Fool owns shares of Procter & Gamble. The Fool frequently reinvests in its disclosure policy.


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 December 08, 2009, at 4:35 PM, InfoThatHelp wrote:

    Using Siegel's thinking, Apple would be a preferred investment to Rim especially since Rim is shelling out $1.2 Billion in its stock buyback effectively wiping out dividends for Rimm shareholders.

  • Report this Comment On December 08, 2009, at 5:32 PM, spokanimal wrote:

    Jordan;

    A couple of points and then a question for you:

    1. For Las Vegas Sands, you cite a forward price-earnings ratio of more than 40 as a reason not to buy it.

    What you've done here is use a "snapshot in time" metric as a tool to bash the stock.

    On the subject of "forward P/E", capable investors typically go beyond the "snapshot in time" and factor in "delta"... which is the rate of change in a particular metric.

    In the case of LV Sands, the forward P/E of the company has contracted from well over 1000 last winter to just over 40 today, even as the price of the stock (the "numerator" in a P/E calculation) has quintripled during that time. Today, as the stock price trades in a range, continuous earnings upgrades (yes another "delta") have contracted the P/E over even the most recent months.

    Bottom line: a given P/E is like a static satellite picture of a cold front... it tells you nothing about where and how fast the cold front is moving. You need to put the picture in motion (delta) to see that.... unless, of course, your objective is to bash a stock like LVS.

    2. When you characterize LVS as having an "uncertain future", are you saying the company has no cost-cutting program or major development in Singapore? The insinuation is that you view the company as aimless. Did you even LISTEN to their last conference call... the one where they said that forward group bookings in Vegas already exceed all of such bookings for 2009? This

    companies future is VERY certain... it's your un-substantiated conclusion that's way out in left field, Jordan.

    Finally, my question:

    You say that "LVS is not Mr. Siegel's idea of a good investment". Please provide me the link or reference where Mr. Siegel said that, if you can.

    And if he didn't say that, please post a reply to this comment that retracts your comment so that your readers can understand just what your motives are here.

    Spokanimal

  • Report this Comment On December 09, 2009, at 5:10 AM, frugalfranny wrote:

    Top 250 list of the highest dividend yielding stocks:

    http://www.TopYields.nl/Top-250-dividend-yields.php

Add your comment.

Compare Brokers

Fool Disclosure

DocumentId: 1062133, ~/Articles/ArticleHandler.aspx, 2/10/2012 7:10:41 AM

Report This Comment

Use this area to report a comment that you believe is in violation of the community guidelines. Our team will review the entry and take any appropriate action.

Sending report...

Today's Market

updated 8 hours ago Sponsored by:
DOW 12,890.46 6.51 0.05%
S&P 500 1,351.95 1.99 0.15%
NASD 2,927.23 11.37 0.39%

Create My Watchlist

Go to My Watchlist

You don't seem to be following any stocks yet!

Better investing starts with a watchlist. Now you can create a personalized watchlist and get immediate access to the personalized information you need to make successful investing decisions.

Data delayed up to 5 minutes

Related Tickers

2/9/2012 4:01 PM
LVS $52.55 Up +0.48 +0.92%
Las Vegas Sands Co… CAPS Rating: **
PG $64.04 Up +0.40 +0.63%
The Procter & Gamb… CAPS Rating: *****
RIMM $15.90 Down -0.59 -3.58%
Research In Motion… CAPS Rating: *
GMCR $64.25 Down -1.03 -1.58%
Green Mountain Cof… CAPS Rating: *
ABT $55.26 Down -0.31 -0.56%
Abbott Laboratorie… CAPS Rating: *****
BIDU $135.45 Up +4.56 +3.48%
Baidu CAPS Rating: **
EBAY $33.26 Up +0.21 +0.64%
eBay CAPS Rating: ***

Advertisement