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The 10 Best Stocks You Might Actually Buy

By Seth Jayson – Updated Mar 7, 2017 at 4:38PM

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We all dream of the biggies, but they're not likely to make us rich. Fortunately, there's a simpler way.

I'm easily obsessed by what I read. Too much Tom Wolfe and my sentences are paragraph-length head trips. If my bedtime stories come from Stephen King, it'll be a week of sewer-dwelling monster-clowns and the "coppery taste of blood and fear" on the back of my tongue.

This month, I'm obsessed with something a bit less frightening. In fact, it's downright uplifting. I'm talking about the numbers in Jeremy Siegel's book The Future for Investors. In it, the man who's credited with "calling the top" of the Internet bubble -- the timing of which he maintains was luck -- demolishes many of the investing tropes that lose us all time and money.

One of the myths he puts to rest is that obscure, unheard-of stocks are necessary if you hope to trounce the wider market. This is simply not true. And that's especially good news, I think, because I have grave doubts about whether any of us can actually find the next big thing. Don't get me wrong -- I want to find it, too, but I'm a realist, and I think my odds of catching that train are low.

Siegel's wide-ranging analysis only reinforces that suspicion, scuttling the idea that blindly chasing growth -- in hopes that one or two big winners can make up for a pile of big risks -- will make you wealthy. (Turns out, when you toss a pile of spaghetti against the wall to see what sticks, most of it really does land on the floor. The one or two noodles that remain will not provide a meal.)

Here's the most simple, powerful, takeaway from Siegel's work: You don't have to look under rocks to find stocks that deliver rock-solid returns.

It's possible to generate market-beating gains with reliable, well-known companies, the kind of stocks you might actually buy, companies that won't give you an ulcer. Let's go to his numbers. These are the top 10 "survivor" stocks of the original S&P 500, from inception until post-2000, with their average annual returns.

Company

Annual Return

Average P/E

Altria (NYSE:MO)

19.8%

13.1

Abbott Laboratories (NYSE:ABT)

16.5%

21.4

Bristol-Meyers Squibb (NYSE:BMY)

16.4%

23.5

Tootsie Roll Industries (NYSE:TR)

16.1%

16.8

Pfizer (NYSE:PFE)

16.0%

26.2

Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO)

16.0%

27.4

Merck (NYSE:MRK)

15.9%

25.3

PepsiCo (NYSE:PEP)

15.5%

20.4

Colgate-Palmolive (NYSE:CL)

15.2%

21.6

Crane (NYSE:CR)

15.1%

13.4

Source: Jeremy Siegel, The Future for Investors.

I find this list incredible, because it shows the power of investing in well-known companies. None of these firms was a newcomer back in the 1950s. In fact, many of them were already decades old and world-famous when the index was created. Yet they all provided market-whomping returns. How is that possible?

Here's the secret: Those returns are calculated with dividends reinvested. In fact, as Siegel later explains, a healthy dividend, regularly redeployed, is the key to compounding average returns into long term, market-beating gains.

This makes perfect sense. When strong companies suffer a down market, those dividends buy you more shares. When the markets readjust, you reap the rewards on more shares.

The longer I invest, the more I find myself adding these kinds of companies to my portfolio. Of course, being a value type, I try to buy them when they're cheapest, but I'm not afraid to pay up for quality. As the third column in that table shows, premium companies always demand a bit of a premium price in the market.

The lesson looks clear enough to me. Boring, already-well-known dividend-payers can power your returns for decades. You don't have to give up your search for the next big thing, but keeping a strong portfolio foundation with stocks like these is the smartest way to play.

Their track record for performance makes them perfect for your tax-free retirement accounts and, as my colleague Robert Brokamp has discussed in his Motley Fool Rule Your Retirement service, a large stable of dividend-payers means income without stock sales. (Let's face it, the best way to heat your house is not to burn the furniture.)

If you'd like to learn more about how dividend-payers like these can help you retire in style, a 30-day guest pass to Rule Your Retirement is free. There's even a featured interview with Jeremy Siegel, where you can learn more about his research.

Seth Jaysonlikes to see that cash. At the time of publication, he had no positions in any company mentioned here. View his stock holdings and Fool profilehere. Coke, Pfizer, and Colgate-Palmolive are Motley Fool Inside Value recommendations. Merck is an Income Investor pick. Fool rules arehere.

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Stocks Mentioned

Merck & Co., Inc. Stock Quote
Merck & Co., Inc.
MRK
$86.18 (-0.69%) $0.60
Altria Group, Inc. Stock Quote
Altria Group, Inc.
MO
$41.47 (-0.50%) $0.21
The Coca-Cola Company Stock Quote
The Coca-Cola Company
KO
$57.87 (-1.25%) $0.73
Pepsico, Inc. Stock Quote
Pepsico, Inc.
PEP
$168.45 (-0.04%) $0.07
Pfizer Inc. Stock Quote
Pfizer Inc.
PFE
$43.83 (-0.57%) $0.25
Bristol Myers Squibb Company Stock Quote
Bristol Myers Squibb Company
BMY
$70.15 (-0.79%) $0.56
Abbott Laboratories Stock Quote
Abbott Laboratories
ABT
$99.84 (-0.83%) $0.84
Colgate-Palmolive Company Stock Quote
Colgate-Palmolive Company
CL
$75.00 (-0.70%) $0.53
Tootsie Roll Industries, Inc. Stock Quote
Tootsie Roll Industries, Inc.
TR
$34.46 (-0.78%) $0.27
Crane Co. Stock Quote
Crane Co.
CR

*Average returns of all recommendations since inception. Cost basis and return based on previous market day close.

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