Customer Service 1 (888) 261-2693
Please enter Search keyword. Advanced Search

This Investment Is Safer – and Pays More Income – Than Gold

By Dan Ferris, editor, The 12% Letter
Thursday, September 1, 2011

What a suicidal thing to do with money...
 
I can't imagine anyone bought stocks last Tuesday when the talk was that Ben Bernanke might announce more quantitative easing at the annual economic policy meeting last Friday.
 
And I can't imagine anyone sold on Thursday, simply because the talk was that he was not going to make such an announcement after all.
 
But it sure seems like somebody was trading on the Bernanke headlines, because the market was up about 3% on Tuesday and down about 2% on Thursday. You can use this nonsense to your advantage as an investor...
 
Huge amounts of money are going in and out of stocks for reasons having nothing to do with the long-term value of the businesses involved... If you can get on the other side of this, you'll wind up owning some fantastic businesses that are being discarded by people who have no idea what they own.
 
Of course, the businesses I'm talking about are World Dominators. A World Dominator business is the No. 1 company in its industry. You're probably familiar with a lot of them. For example, UPS is the No. 1 package delivery company in the world. Wal-Mart is the No. 1 retail network. Intel is the No. 1 maker of semiconductors.
 
These companies have thick profit margins, fortress balance sheets, and typically pay out large and growing dividends. They are the ultimate safe haven in today's market... even safer than gold.
 
These days, you never know what the next massive "stimulus" package will be or when it will be announced... You never know if the government is going to take over another industry or pass a new, gargantuan, super-expensive program... You never know what new, massive regulations are on the way to choke the life out of, say, the country's community banks (like the new Dodd-Frank law).
 
All these things create enormous amounts of uncertainty... and the market hates uncertainty.
 
Once upon a time in America, you had a reasonable degree of confidence that the government wasn't going to go too far. Then, after a while, all you had was a reasonable degree of confidence that the government would go too far, but not often enough to completely ruin our wonderful economy.
 
Now, all you have is a reasonable degree of confidence that the strongest, most competitive businesses – the World Dominators – will likely stay that way.
 
The federal government is bankrupt. Its credit rating should be triple-C (just a few notches from bankrupt), not triple-A (as it is still rated by Moody's and Fitch). But World Dominators like Microsoft and Johnson & Johnson are truly triple-A companies. Their balance sheets are financial fortresses. Their businesses are incredibly difficult to compete with. They earn consistent profit margins, a sign of their superior ability to compete.
 
They generate enormous sums of cash flow, above and beyond what they need to keep their businesses growing. They pay out dividends and buy back shares, to the direct benefit of their shareholders.
 
In other words, though many World Dominators are really in bed with the government and gain substantial advantages from having the government on their side, they're also, in a way, the antidote to the government and its fiat dollar...
 
The fiat dollar is in terminal decline. Many investors (including myself) are protecting their savings by buying gold, which is timelessly valuable. But what the World Dominators provide is timelessly valuable as well...
 
The government grows big by increased amounts of theft, via taxes and inflation. The World Dominators grow large by giving more value than they get. I wouldn't be surprised if one day we were trading with shares of World Dominators instead of U.S. dollars.
 
After all, which would you trust to maintain its value? The government's paper or shares of Wal-Mart?
 
I know my answer to that. Wal-Mart, and many other World Dominators have held their value and even climbed since 2006. This time period has included the credit crash, the recession, the "flash crash," and last month's panic. They've also kept up, and grown, their dividend payments.
 
So when I see the latest bout of uncertainty putting World Dominators on sale, I'm happy to take the other side of that trade. I'm happy to get the certainty that owning World Dominators provides.
 
Good investing,
 
Dan Ferris




Further Reading:

"World Dominator companies rarely get cheap, because everybody knows how valuable they are," Dan tells us. "But with markets so volatile today, high-risk stocks have stolen the spotlight. And the safe, low-risk World Dominators are left in the shadows."
 
If you want to protect your wealth and earn a good return, don't get caught owning risky garbage stocks. Buy World Dominators. Find out how you can get started here: The Most Valuable Stocks in the World Are on Sale Right Now.

Market Notes


THIS STOCK SOARED WHILE OTHERS FELL

One of our "investment rarities," Royal Gold, has gone wild.
 
During last month's selling panic, we noted how longtime DailyWealth recommendation Royal Gold had become an "investment rarity" (as the "rare coin" shysters like to say). While stocks of all types were plunging, Royal Gold was one of the few stocks advancing to new highs.
 
Two big factors are driving Royal Gold's bull market: One, Western governments are going "full bore" with the same spending, taxing, borrowing, and "bailing out" policies that got us into the 2008 credit crisis. This drives the price of gold higher and higher. Two, Royal Gold employs the efficient "royalty" model to gold mining.
 
As you can see, this model is working well. Royal Gold has skyrocketed 34% in the past two months... all during a time of terrible performance for stocks in general. This huge performer is due for a healthy correction, but the lesson here is clear: Traders and investors need to keep a list of quality gold stocks on hand at all times. These assets can soar while others sink.


In The Daily Crux



Recent Articles