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Where to Find Safe Triple-Digit Gains Right Now

By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
Friday, June 25, 2010

Since starting my True Wealth newsletter in 2001, I've avoided buying big U.S. stocks.
 
I've avoided big-name stocks because I thought they were too expensive. But now, for the first time in my career, I'm finding value in some big U.S. stocks… particularly in one sector.
 
Look, stocks today (as measured by the big indexes) are currently cheaper than they were 11 years ago, back in 1999. The important thing is this: While the share prices are lower, many companies have grown dramatically…
 
Consider the case of Johnson & Johnson... Its share price is in the $50s today, like it was at its highs in 1999. But since then, the business has grown dramatically. Now, you get a whole lot more business for your investment buck.
 
Warren Buffett – the world's most successful investor – likes to measure the growth in his business by its growth in book value. By that measure, Johnson & Johnson is 70% cheaper today than it was in 1999 because of its growth. Back then, J&J traded for 10 times book value. It trades at three times book value today.
 
J&J has rarely been this cheap... And history tells us we really want to own it when it gets cheap!
 
J&J dipped below four times book value in early 1994... The share price soared 150% within two years. You have to go back a quarter-century to find it as cheap as it is today. And of course, the stock soared after that as well: Shares doubled in less than two years and tripled in just over three years.
 
It's also cheap when you look at earnings. J&J is trading at 12 times earnings right now. Shares have only been this cheap a couple times in history. In all instances, you could have made a heck of a lot of money...
  • J&J fell to 11.9 times earnings in March 1980. The stock doubled in less than three years.
     
  • In June '84, it traded down to 10.9 times earnings. The stock nearly tripled over the next three years.
     
  • Its next big valuation low was April 1994, at a price to earnings of 13.8. The stock tripled in three years.
It seems like investors have given up on drug companies like J&J. Whether it's worries about patent expirations, dry drug "pipelines," lawsuits... or just simply boredom after a decade of no return, shareholders have thrown in the towel.
 
But J&J isn't going away. I don't know about at your house, but around my house we are big J&J customers for life – without even realizing it...
 
We use Listerine. We have for decades. We aren't changing. We use Band-Aids. We have for decades. And we aren't changing. We use Neosporin... The list goes on, longer than you can imagine. These are all Johnson & Johnson brands.
 
And then there are the drugs, including Tylenol, Motrin, Sudafed, Benadryl, and more. J&J has probably infiltrated our house more than any other company in America. These J&J brands are insulated from economic downturns. We will continue to use these products at home... indefinitely.
 
And these are just a few examples of brands you recognize from J&J. The company does a lot more than Band-Aids and Tylenol. Importantly, it holds the No. 1 or No. 2 rank in 70% of its products.
 
Despite all of this... the stock is dirt-cheap. I was talking about this with my colleague Frank Curzio, who writes the super-exclusive Phase 1 Investor advisory. He said, "I can't think of one risk that's not already priced into these stocks... and at some price, everything is a buy."
 
I think "some price" is today's price...
 
Keep in mind, Johnson & Johnson is a no-debt business. (With $18 billion in cash, it has more cash than debt.) It has an incredible collection of brands, which should insulate it from economic downturns. It has one of the best drug pipelines in the industry: It's developing drugs for pain, arthritis, and heart disease. Finally, the company knows its stock is cheap... It has bought back $9 billion worth of its own stock since 2007, and will likely buy back $1 billion more over the rest of this year.
 
Most big pharmaceutical companies are at record cheap values – by far. Many are significantly cheaper than Johnson & Johnson. History shows when these stocks get this cheap, triple-digit gains follow.
 
In True Wealth, I look for sectors that are cheap, hated/ignored, and just starting an uptrend.
 
Big drug companies are record cheap, investors have given up on them, and we might be seeing a glimmer of an uptrend.
 
A safe, simple way to play the big drug companies is through the iShares U.S. Health Care ETF (IYH). Its largest holding, incidentally, is Johnson & Johnson.
 
I'm almost never interested in Big Pharma... But I'm buying now. It's just too cheap to ignore.
 
Good investing,
 
Steve




Further Reading:

Two weeks ago, Brian Hunt reminded us Johnson & Johnson shares typically only suffer in price when there's a major "freak out" in the economy and the broader stock market. Read more on his idea in this Market Notes piece: Our J&J System Says Buy.
 
Big Pharma is not the only sector Steve's been considering that might surprise you. He recently told DailyWealth readers he thinks it might be time to buy banks. "I think we're ready to enter a new, more conservative era in banking. The banks that flew too close to the sun are gone," he said… And insiders are loading up. You can read more about this idea here: The Banking Advice That Keeps Ringing in my Head.



BET ON INTEREST RATES? NO THANKS.

Today’s chart proves once again betting on higher interest rates is a hard dollar…

Once or twice a year, we remind readers that there are much greener “trading pastures” in the market than making the popular bet on higher interest rates. As Steve pointed out years ago, realtors are the world’s worst interest rate forecasters… but they’re just barely worse than market gurus and Wall Street analysts who predict where interest rates are headed.

Below is the past seven years of the yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note. This is the most widely followed interest rate in the world… the rate used to set mortgages and car loans.
 
As you can see from the right side of the chart, the yield recently plummeted below 3.25%… to around the level it was at in 2003 and 2008. Concerns of a slowing economy caused the decline.

We’re sure some short-term traders out there are able to make money on interest rate gyrations. But for the majority of folks, it’s far easier to profit from things you look at from a value standpoint… like buying cheap oilbuying cheap gold stocksshorting expensive real estatebuying cheap Asian stocks… and buying blown out natural gas. Leave the interest rate bets to the realtors!

The 10-year yield: years of moving sideways
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