Leading the Vanguard Windsor Fund, John Neff beat the market by more than three percentage points per year for more than 30 years. That's an incredible track record and the difference between $39,116 and $17,449 on a $1,000 investment, assuming a 10% average return. Here's the master's secret: Two of those three percentage points came from dividends. So while Neff worked hard to buy cheap stocks, dividends were crucial to outsized returns. That's totally cool!

To help find totally cool stocks that offered value and income, Neff used his total return ratio, defined as:

Total Return Ratio = (analysts' expected earnings growth rate dividend yield) / price-to-earnings ratio

Neff would compare company ratios to the market's ratio. If a company's ratio was at least 50% greater than the market's, he gave it look. If Neff’s research revealed the market misinterpreted the company's prospects and thus created an opportunity, he purchased shares for the portfolio.

Currently, the market's total return ratio is about 0.95. (I used a Shiller P/E of 20.1, a yield of 2%, and two-year estimated earnings growth of 17.2%.) So to meet Neff's criteria, a company's ratio must be greater than 1.43.

Office supply manufacturer Avery Dennison (NYSE: AVY) looks like a company John Neff would consider as a total return opportunity. Let's compare it to the competition.

Company

2-Year Growth
Est. (%)

Yield (%)

P/E

Total Return
Ratio

Avery Dennison Corporation

23.8

2.2

14.6

1.62

3M Co. (NYSE: MMM)

15.6

2.4

15.4

1.01

Newell Rubbermaid Inc. (NYSE: NWL)

11.7

1.2

14.9

0.79

Compared to other office supply producers 3M and Newell Rubbermaid, Watsco comes out a clear winner as a total return opportunity. 3M pays a higher dividend, but analysts aren't expecting as much earnings growth as Avery Dennison. Newell Rubbermaid trails with both its yield and its growth.

The Foolish bottom line
Neff's total return ratio is beautiful because it combines value and income: cheap stocks with dividend kickers. Investors can profit from multiple expansion while collecting dividend payments along the way. And as Neff showed, done correctly, this strategy can lead to excess returns over the market. As with any metric, Neff’s total return ratio is just a starting point. But with a total return ratio of 1.62, Avery Dennison certainly seems like a totally cool stock to get to know.