But if interest rates increase, it'll be a wide
moat stock on a trajectory to return an excellent 10 % a year.
But if interest rates increase, it'll be a wide
moat stock on a trajectory to return an excellent 10 % a year.
Not exact matches
In the era of accelerated innovation and crashing
Moats it behooves
on investors to monitor their
stocks and usually sell when price goes above intrinsic value.
Many U.S.
stocks have wide
moats so to narrow the list I added in a little Graham by focusing
on the lowest combination of P / E and P / B ratios.
An Excellent Speculation
on Higher Interest Rates If interest rates never rise, this wide -
moat stock will be
on a trajectory to return a modest 7 % a year.
Apache Corporation (APA) was the first
stock that appeared in the list of potential wide
moat stocks that I plan
on
In length, an array of authors argue that
stocks / businesses, which have exhibited industry - beating returns
on capital, often possess a competitive edge, a
moat, of which there are four types:
A chapter
on hedging against inflation focuses
on finding
stocks with «
moats» that can raise prices as inflation starts to roar, and the final chapter looks at commodities, gold and other real assets.
If interest rates never rise, this wide -
moat stock will be
on a trajectory to return a modest 7 % a year.
Here are the wide
moat stocks, based
on Morningstar's rating in the Canadian S&P / TSX dividend Aristocrats:
[My portfolio's clearly a life - time endeavour, so it changes v slowly, no matter how compelling turning
on a dime might seem each day as the pundits mouth off] And illustrating the luck of the draw here, my most successful holding last year was actually a luxury goods
stock — clearly, a company intent
on building & maintaining an economic
moat — but unfortunately it never quite made it onto the blog.
This list is a screen of all the wide
moat stocks (based
on Morningstar) that are also part of the Dividend Aristocrats select list.
Even though both strategies will yield ridiculously good returns, the fact that most of these companies don't have extremely durable
moats means that just in case you're holding
on these
stocks while the
stock market is entering a bear market, these companies might not survive the bear market due to narrow or no
moats, or they will drop in value much more due to being in small to medium cap.
Everyone talks about some combination of 1) owning part share in a quality business, 2) buying good companies at good prices, 3) finding
moats, 4) insisting
on discounts / margins of safety, and 5) making contrarian bets (buying
stocks under duress).