The ‘Most Hated Company On Earth’ That I’d Like To Own ‘Forever’

Some stocks are good for a quick pop, but you have to time it just right. Case in point: Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX) investors have seen several double-digit surges over the last year. They’ve also seen the stock plummet by as much as a third on more than a few occasions.

High-risk and high-reward stocks are great for kick-starting a portfolio, and they certainly make investing interesting, but many investors have been broken by high-flying has-beens. For instance, wireless giant BlackBerry (Nasdaq: BBRY) made a lot of people wealthy as its stock price rocketed 17-fold between 2003 and 2007. Investors who bought in at BBRY’s height, on the other hand, are looking at a 90% loss.

A chance at overnight success is great, but the single best way to make money in stocks is to buy those you can buy and hold “forever.” These “Forever” stocks, as StreetAuthority co-founder Paul Tracy calls them, combine consistent growth and income and have stood the test of time. These companies enjoy a competitive advantage through industry forces like low bargaining power of buyers and suppliers, high barriers to entry, low threats from substitutes, and minimal rivalry among competitors.

These companies are here to stay — in your portfolio.

One of these “Forever” stocks is a company in one of the most hated industries, yet the stock is in the portfolio of almost 1,400 institutional funds. The industry’s product has been shown to kill its customers over the long term, and this company is the largest among them. If you haven’t already guessed, the industry is tobacco, and the company is Philip Morris International (NYSE: PM), the world’s largest publicly traded manufacturer and marketer of tobacco products.

Why should investors love shares of a company that is so hated? Because it has consistently outperformed the market and provided stable growth and income. Since the worst of the financial meltdown, shares of Philip Morris have rebounded 143% versus 110% for the S&P 500. That price gain is above the 3.9% dividend yield, a payout that the company has increased 85% since 2008.#-ad_banner-#

Philip Morris has seven of the top cigarette brands, including Marlboro, the market leader. The company sells across a diverse market, with Asia accounting for 36% of international sales last year, followed by Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Africa at 27%, the European Union at 26%, and Latin America and Canada at 11%.

Excluding China and the United States, the company’s share of total global volume increased from 24.9% in 2007 to 28.8% in 2012. On top of an increasing share of the market, after three consecutive years of declining volume to 2010, unit sales of cigarettes have been increasing by an average of 2.8% per year, to 93.7 billion units in 2012. Higher excise taxes in Europe have led to some unit declines, but these have been offset by dramatic increases in the Asian markets.

China is where the growth lies in the industry, with 44% of last year’s estimated industry volume outside the United States. There are an estimated 301 million people smoking in China. This number is growing at an annual rate of 3.9%, and China had the lowest quit rates in a survey of 16 emerging and industrialized countries. The Chinese market is largely state-controlled through the China National Tobacco Corp., with which Philip Morris is establishing joint ventures.

The company has made a firm commitment of returning cash to shareholders and has managed the trade-off between growth and dividends superbly. Free cash flows have increased at a 13.3% compound annual rate since 2007 to $8.4 billion in 2012.

Philip Morris has consistently beaten its long-term annual target of 10% to 12% growth in earnings per share (EPS) with a five-year average growth of 15%. In this year’s second quarter, the company announced a three-year, $18 billion stock repurchase program. At the current price, this represents a reduction in share count of about 4% each year, which should help support EPS growth. Since 2008, Philip Morris has spent $24.4 billion to buy back about 450 million shares for a reduction of 21.3% in the number of shares outstanding.

As hazardous to your health as smoking is, Philip Morris offers clear benefits for your portfolio’s health. EPS growth in excess of 12% per year, which includes a share count reduction of 4%, and a 3.9% dividend are returns you would be hard-pressed to find in the strongest growth stocks — let alone a company in a mature and stable market with forever potential.

Risks to Consider: The risks to Philip Morris and the industry in general are short-term scares surrounding legislation and substitute products. The shares drop every time rumors of new regulations hit, but legislation has yet to dent the industry’s long-term profitability or outlook.

Action to Take –> Philip Morris International has true forever potential in an industry with stable growth and terrific cash flow. You don’t have to like its products, but you can’t deny a history of market-beating returns.

P.S. — My colleague Elliott Gue is so sure about Philip Morris, he’s named it one of his “Forever Stocks.” Right now may be the best chance in years to buy these stocks. Three are trading at a discount of up to 25.5%. Eight have a history of solid dividend growth, and five beaten the S&P 500’s 9% gain so far this year. To find out more, click here.