Nowadays it's hard to imagine any stock being truly great. But if you're a long-term investor who's hoping to profit tomorrow from today's panic, my advice is to invest in firms that exhibit each of these three winning traits:

  1. They're self-funded. Top stocks produce bushels of free cash flow. Comcast (NASDAQ:CMCSA) and Philip Morris International (NYSE:PM) are perfect examples of this. Combined, they've produced more than $11 billion in FCF over the past 12 months alone.
  2. They're growing fast. Big winners tend to attract customers and produce massive revenue growth, as Green Mountain Coffee Roasters (NASDAQ:GMCR) has over the past five years.
  3. They possess sustainable advantages. Great stocks have the chops to fund growth and expand margins. Think of how Best Buy (NYSE:BBY) has outmaneuvered its weaker retail competitors. Or Visa (NYSE:V) and its universally known credit card brand.

Every one of these firms is a great business. I highlight them here because history proves that, while low-priced businesses can make for good returns, reasonably priced great businesses can make you rich.

Cheap stocks, cheap returns
Consider Google. When the search king was preparing for its August 2004 IPO, hundreds of stocks sold for less than 15 times earnings. Why pick 15? Jeremy Siegel pegs the 130-year average P/E of the market at 14.45.

Google, selling for around 100 times earnings, wasn't anywhere near that. Investors adhering to the investapo's party line -- that pricey multiples are rarely rewarded -- opted out of Google and into "cheap" stocks: Deutsche Bank (NYSE:DB) and Ford Motor (NYSE:F), for example, which were trading for 12.0 and 11.1 times earnings, respectively, on the day of DoubleGoo's public debut.

But it was the cheapskates who went unrewarded. Deutsche Bank and Ford have lagged Google and the market since the summer of 2004.

Great businesses, great returns
Were you to check my portfolio today, you'd see that I've finally learned my lesson; Google is too great a business to ignore. But it isn't the best stock idea I've ever seen.

That one is self-funded, growing fast, features sustainable advantages, and accounts for more than 20% of my portfolio. Here's why:

  • Free cash flow exceeded $100 million over the trailing 12 months.
  • Return on invested capital exceeds 40%.
  • Operating margins are expanding dramatically and net margin is up over 25%.

What really excites me, though, is that this stock, which commands less than $3 billion in market value, is about to enter a hypergrowth phase that should unleash tens of billions in additional value.

David Gardner agrees. He's recommended this stock to Motley Fool Stock Advisor subscribers three times since the July 2002 issue. Learn why with a 30-day free trial to the service. You'll get unfettered access to all of David's picks, and there's no obligation to subscribe.

Fool contributor Tim Beyers had stock and options positions in Google at the time of publication. Google is a Rule Breakers recommendation. Best Buy has been recommended by both our Inside Value and Stock Advisor services. The Motley Fool owns shares of Best Buy. Its disclosure policy would be the best-dressed disclosure policy if words didn't already prefer to be naked.