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The Easiest Path to $1 Millionby Motley Fool - September 14, 2007 - 0 comments
By Richard Gibbons When thinking about the easiest way to make a million dollars, the lottery comes near the top of my list. But after extensive research into this intriguing investment strategy, I discovered a couple of problems. First, lottery tickets lose money on average. Second, they have really high variance -- I could buy a lottery ticket every day for the rest of my life and still not win the top prize. In fact, if I did it for my next 250 lifetimes, I most likely wouldn't win the top prize. After 2,500 years, it would get pretty frustrating to lose every time. So a less-annoying strategy is to simply buy stocks on a regular basis and wait for them to become worth a bundle. Two simple strategies On the other hand, it's still a long time. I'd rather get there faster, so I'd prefer better-performing stocks. Luckily, it's still easy to find stocks that have higher returns -- value stocks returned 11% a year over the same time period. That would reduce the time to $1 million from 46 to 33 years. In fact, some of the best performing value funds have made serious money on big value picks like JP Morgan (NYSE: JPM) and UBS (NYSE: UBS), which have returned 17.8% and 10.4% annually over the past two years. But, you know, I'm really impatient. I'd prefer to make my $1 million even more quickly. A faster way
Aside from great returns, what do these stocks have in common? Two things. First, they are all stocks selected by expert value investors. Moody's and Wells Fargo are longtime holdings of Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffett's company. IBM and AutoNation are two of Eddie Lampert's picks -- a fellow lauded as the next Warren Buffett. Lloyd's and Colgate are two companies recommended by Philip Durell, the lead analyst of our Inside Value newsletter. The "Bought" and "Sold" years in the table indicate both when these investors found the shares attractive enough to buy and when they decided that the potential upside was no longer great enough to justify maintaining their position. Second, these stocks aren't your typical companies. They're much better. They're well known and dominant in their respective niches. Colgate faces titans like Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG) on a daily basis and still makes plenty of money. Simply speaking, these aren't cigar butts. They're excellent businesses that can provide superior returns for a long time. And that's the key to getting even better returns out of value stocks -- focusing on quality. There are tons of companies out there but few can develop the brand quality that a company like Nike (NYSE: NKE) leverages to the max. Don't just buy any value stock, buy the best and strongest companies. In other words, don't settle for the Chrysler when you can get the Ferrari for the same price. How long with these stocks? © 2007 Universal Press Syndicate. |
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