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Investors Are Flocking to a New Group of Companies

Jun 30th, 2009 | By Andrew Snyder | Category: Stock Market Investing

On October 29, 2008 a pipeline company, Western Gas (NYSE:WES), announced plans that made its shareholders very happy. I wasn’t a shareholder at the time but its announcement caught my attention and I began following the company.

Two months later I recommended it to my readers. In the following six months its shares rose 15 percent. On February 25, 2009 utility company, FPL Group (NYSE:FPL), made a similar announcement. I began looking into the company right away. This time it only took me two weeks to recommend the company to my readers. In the following four months its shares rose 33 percent.

On March 11 Coke (NYSE:KO) made the same announcement. On April 1st, 2009 I recommended it. In just three months it’s gone up nine percent.

These three companies are members of a class of companies I call the “Group of 88.” They all love to please their shareholders.

So, what is this Group of 88?

Many of the companies belonging to the Group of 88 you know: Not only Coke, but also companies like Johnson and Johnson (NYSE:JNJ), IBM, Verizon (NYSE:VZ), McDonalds (NYSE:MCD) and Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX).

Many of them you don’t know. You probably haven’t heard of companies like VSE Corporation (NASDAQ:VSEC), W.P. Carey & Company (NYSE:WPC) and National Fuel Gas Company (NYSE:NFG).

These companies come in all sizes and from all kinds of sectors. And, since the beginning of the year, they all have one thing in common. All of them have raised their dividend.

Increasing dividends has always been a surefire way to please shareholders. So why have dividend hikers increased in popularity?

•    They’re now in the minority. For the first time in decades more companies are cutting rather than raising dividends.
•    They’re the ultimate “show-me-the-cash” companies. Dividends can’t be faked or staged. They must be paid for by real cash earnings.
•    They’ve become the alternative safe-haven group of companies to triple-A rated companies. The rating agencies – S&P, Moody’s, and Fitch – had given triple-A status to junk assets that crashed the global economy. Their grades aren’t taken nearly as seriously anymore.

Many of these dividend-paying companies give you interest payments of 4, 5, 6 percent and more. Compare that with 2-year U.S. government bonds giving 2 percent interest … or 10-year bonds giving 3.66 percent interest … or Canadian 10-years giving 3.43 percent and Germany’s giving 3.5 percent.

This is the perfect time to invest in recent dividend hikers. Several have been raising dividends not just over, say, the past 10-20 quarters but over the past 10-20 years!  Think about it. Many of them have raised dividends during oil embargoes, dotcom busts, and stagflation. They’ve proven themselves many times over.

And by recently raising their dividends, they’re showing investors once again that they’re the companies you can trust … they’re the ones generating real cash earnings … and that they’re the ones which will make it through these treacherous times and lead the market back up on the other side of the recession.

Invest well,
Andy


Source: Investors Are Flocking to a New Group of Companies


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By Andrew Snyder

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Andrew is a contributor to Daily Reckoning Australia and Today's Financial News.

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Today's Financial News provides an independent and practical perspective on the U.S. and global investment markets. We provide you with a free, reliable, easy, up-to-date, and focused resource to help you make your financial decisions with commentary, interviews, recommendations, and video. Today's Financial News includes the analysis and opinions of those editors whom we have come to trust over the course of the years.

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