Give a Gift

Stocks & Bonds

Where to Invest in 2010

The long-term economic outlook remains gloomy, but stocks should still advance in the coming year.

By Andrew Tanzer, Senior Associate Editor

From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, January 2010
Text Size T T
  • Comments
  • Print This Article
  • Order a Reprint
  • Advertisement

A focus on earnings

Clearly, the U.S. faces many long-term structural problems. But the stock market, which began its remarkable leap after investors concluded that economic Armageddon was no longer at hand, will advance as it responds to an improving earnings picture. And treading carefully amid the wreckage in the economy, investors can still find some alluring themes.

One idea is to invest in blue-chip companies with strong foreign sales. Mike Avery, co-manager of Ivy Asset Strategy, a global fund, hunts for “best in class” U.S. companies with strong overseas footprints. His U.S. multi-national holdings include Monsanto (symbol MON), Apple (AAPL) and Nike (NKE).

Related Links


Channing Smith, co-manager of Capital Advisors, says he holds YUM Brands (YUM), which operates KFC and Pizza Hut restaurants, for its large and fast-growing China business. He gravitated toward Procter & Gamble (PG), which sells affordable necessities, such as diapers and razor blades, for similar reasons.

Information technology, an area in which the U.S. leads, also benefits from global economic recovery. Alan Gayle, senior investment strategist of SunTrust’s RidgeWorth Investments, says many tech giants have strong balance sheets with little debt and sport impressive profit margins. Stocks he likes include Adobe Systems (ADBE), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) and Microsoft (MSFT).

Like the technology sector, the energy and materials industries generate the bulk of their sales abroad. But exports and overseas sales are only part of the story for these businesses. Commodities, such as oil and iron, are traded globally and priced in dollars, so if demand from emerging markets and a weak buck drive up prices, the natural-resources producers benefit.

Jerry Jordan, manager of Jordan Opportunity Fund, expects another onslaught of commodity-price inflation over the next couple of years -- particularly in areas that have little new capacity coming on-stream, such as oil and copper. He likes oil-equipment and energy-services companies, including National Oilwell Varco (NOV) and Halliburton (HAL).

Jordan is also a bull on agriculture, reasoning that the rapidly rising consumption of animal protein in emerging markets will boost demand for grain used to feed livestock. His main plays on food are through a pork producer in China and through PowerShares DB Agriculture (DBA), an exchange-traded fund that holds futures contracts on grains and sugar. Rich Howard, co-manager of Prospector Opportunity, favors DuPont (DD). The chemical giant has a large and growing seed-technology business that competes with Monsanto’s.

Like many others worried about the health of the U.S. dollar and other major currencies, Howard has become a gold bug. He’s allocated 10% of his portfolio to mining stocks, including Barrick Gold (ABX) and Newmont Mining (NEM).

You can also profit from more domestically oriented stocks. Smith believes that companies such as Wal-Mart Stores (WMT) and PetSmart (PETM) will benefit from the new frugality of U.S. consumers (see What’s in Store for the Next Decade). He recently purchased shares of CarMax (KMX), the largest used-car retailer in the U.S. With just 2% of the national market, the company has plenty of room to expand.

Health care is a huge and growing domestic industry that’s difficult to ignore. But uncertainty about the direction of health-care reform makes investing tricky. Smith favors companies that will benefit from cost reduction and expanded insurance coverage, such as Quest Diagnostics (DGX), which provides testing services, and McKesson (MCK), a leading drug distributor. He’s also bullish on Abbott Laboratories (ABT), a diversified, steady grower that he considers undervalued.

You can, of course, invest in themes such as these through diversified funds. For instance, Fidelity Contrafund (FCNTX) and Selected American Shares (SLASX) are both stuffed with large, blue-chip U.S. companies with sturdy foreign franchises. For a fund tilted more toward tech and health stocks, consider Primecap Odyssey Growth (POGRX).

If you expect prices of oil, gold, grains and other stuff to continue to rise, you can invest through a fund such as Pimco CommodityRealReturn Strategy (PCRDX), which seeks to track commodity futures prices. Or you can buy into a fund such as T. Rowe Price New Era (PRNEX), which invests in stocks of natural-resources companies.

If all of the many risks out there scare you, then take a look at FPA Crescent (FPACX), which has the ability to sell stocks short (that is, bet on their share prices to fall) and to invest in bonds and bank loans. Crescent has a long history of enjoying most of the gains of bull markets and protecting capital during tough times.

Introductory Offer: Get Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine for $12. Save 75%!

DISCUSS

Permission to post your comment is assumed when you submit it. The name you provide will be used to identify your post, and NOT your e-mail address. We reserve the right to excerpt or edit any posted comments for clarity, appropriateness, civility, and relevance to the topic.
View our full privacy policy

Reader Comments (4)

Posted by: Valio Smith at 12/21/2009 04:55:08 AM

Non interest to short-term invest is normal reaction across the crisis situation. They will be most popular at the end of 2010. For me personally it's good to invest in niche at countries with good financial indicators at the moment (ex.: Bulgaria is a single country in the world with only 0.7% budget deficit - seeurope.net/?q=node/18632 ). My supposition is for increase the dollar price and I'm not scared from big runaway sells of bonds and stocks, which make the market to get 'crazy' . It is normal many countries to suppose bigger deficit for 2010 - it's still crisis time. Bad loans was expecting thing, but more loan secure will make low quantity of loans. Property and construction investing is still risky thing - market holds low positions and that kind of investing can transform invest to much long-term and invest with vague refundable, till food and agriculture (ex.: "business webdirectory agriculture") chemical industry and energy supply, mining and heavy industry are modern always. I don't give a hints for what to invest, there are much strong companies, but you know, that the risky invest in small companies is with much many profit. I think in 2010 long-term investing will be still preferred by bigger piece of investors. Anyway I'll suggest everyone to consult with experts (ex.: "db2b business directory financial and law expert") before start to invest, because the crisis is not gone yet.

Posted by: Gman at 01/22/2010 11:12:25 PM

Hand of the Government wrested economy from the Abyss? What a load of trash. For all the education in the world simple math has eluded you? In what world does taxpayer theft and goverment spending equate to a economic recovery? The fixes are so simple yet all the Harvard and Yale educations combined seem to produce nothing but word twisting self loathing idiots. Its pretty easy to fix this problem. We stopped producing and kept consuming completely destroying our savings. Until we tear up that NAFTA crap, Kick the private Federal reserve out of our monetary system, and eliminate ALL business taxes in the U.S. we will continue to wonder why our standard of living drops and dollar sinks in value. Yeah we will have a few rallies here and there propped up by unsustainable and artificial means but no long lasting wealth building opportunity until the changes are made.

Posted by: Bob at 07/04/2010 05:07:49 PM

I AGREE WITH Gman!!!!!!!!!!!!

Posted by: frank at 10/02/2010 06:58:25 PM

Everyone agrees Port Saint Lucie Florida is the absolute best place to open a buisness or to have a home. This place is beautiful and the City of Port Saint Lucie is moving along like theres no tomorrow. And the building going on you would think it's 2005 during the boom.They just built a new civic center that would knock your socks off it won best design i can see why. Also new malls are going up everywhere,new roads,new drainage systems,new hotels,new LA fitness,investors are going crazy snatching up homes,new bridge is going in to connect the island even plans for an international airport. Im so glad i found out about this place through cnn, money mag,fortune mag,forbs . Thank you for your advice. I just purchased a million dollars worth of realestate and retired instantly cant thank you enough...



Featured Videos From Kiplinger





Connect With Kiplinger

E-mail Updates: Select the Kiplinger columns and topics to be delivered to your inbox.

email-sign-up

facebook
twitter
RSS