Recs

8

These Stocks Will Burn You

In his article "The Market's 10 Best Stocks," my colleague Tim Hanson pointed out the benefits of searching for the next multibagger success stories among the smallest of companies.

And I agree with him: The best stocks of the next decade are not huge companies today. Why not? This chart should explain. Look how large each of these solid businesses would become if they increased just 10 times in value over the next decade.

Company

Current Market Cap (Billions)

10-Bagger Market Cap (Trillions)

China Mobile (NYSE: CHL  )

$176.4

$1.7

Visa (NYSE: V  )

$49.4

$0.5

Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL  )

$97.7

$1.0

Merck (NYSE: MRK  )

$50.4

$0.5

Research In Motion (Nasdaq: RIMM  )

$37.8

$0.4

Amgen (Nasdaq: AMGN  )

$52.8

$0.5

Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT  )

$180.0

$1.8

While it's certainly possible, we probably won't have a trillion-dollar company by 2019 -- much less see any of these large caps turn into 20- or 30-baggers. So we can count the giants in this chart out of the running for best performer of the next decade.

Instead, the greatest chance for the bigesst gains comes from the smallest of companies, like the Tiny Gems followed by the Motley Fool Hidden Gems team. These half-pints are capitalized at less than $200 million, and there's plenty of room for them to grow before they run into the headwinds of large numbers and their prospects become more limited.

But before you take a free trial and jump head-first into the micro-cap waters, listen up. This ride is not for everybody.

Buckle up
With great potential reward comes great risk. Just as a tiny company has the greatest chance at outlandish gains, it also has the best chance of going belly-up ... bankrupt ... gone ... along with your money. And the volatility along the way to greatness or the graveyard may give you whiplash. Yes, these stocks can burn you. Thus, these Tiny Gems are best suited for risk-tolerant investors with a long-term outlook.

That said, two things can greatly reduce the chance that your portfolio will get torched by tanking Tinies:

  1. Believe the balance sheet. This is where you can tell whether a company is in danger. Little cash and large amounts of debt are a big warning sign, especially for businesses not yet turning a profit. Go back through the last several balance sheets. Is the company burning through cash? How quickly? My advice: Stick to profitable companies with cash-to-debt ratios of at least 1.5.
  2. Buy a "basket" of these micro caps. In other words, allocate the amount of funds you normally would for one stock to several of the Tinies -- four or five, for example. That way, you're giving yourself more of a chance at finding at least one huge gainer, which will more than make up for it if one or two of the others lose most of their value.

Are you still ready to forge onward to Tinyland? Good. Click here for information on a free trial to Hidden Gems, including all of our official small-cap recommendations.

Already subscribe to Hidden Gems? Log in at the top of this page.

This article was originally published on Jan. 30, 2006. It has been updated.

Rex Moore helps the Hidden Gems team pan for micro-caps. He owns shares of Microsoft. Microsoft is a Motley Fool Inside Value recommendation. The Motley Fool is investors helping investors.


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 30, 2009, at 11:09 PM, InfoThatHelp wrote:

    My accounting professor taught me that financial statements is a work of art. I fully believed him.

    A client I worked for had restated its income statement 7 times within 2 days just prior to the deadline.

    Nortel was also famous for producing financial statements that were challenged.

    Rim seems to remind me a little of Nortel. There are questions on Rim's financial statements and operations that puzzled me given the state of the economy, and the fantastic cash burn rate of its many high volume and frequent expenditures and campaigns. There are ways to report expenses and cashflows. In this tumulous environment anything can happen within a blink of the eyes. Enron serves as a good reminder of flash bankruptcies burning hundreds of thousands of stakeholders even in times of apparent prosperity, and we are experiencing the worst economi climate in 5 decades.

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Related Tickers

5/25/2012 4:00 PM
ORCL $26.14 Up +0.02 +0.08%
Oracle Corp. CAPS Rating: ****
RIMM $11.00 Up +0.29 +2.71%
Research In Motion… CAPS Rating: *
V $119.37 Down -0.40 -0.33%
Visa, Inc. CAPS Rating: ****
AMGN $69.05 Down -0.05 -0.07%
Amgen, Inc. CAPS Rating: ****
CHL $50.99 Down +0.00 +0.00%
China Mobile CAPS Rating: ****
MRK $37.55 Down -0.05 -0.13%
Merck & Co., Inc. CAPS Rating: ****

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