We’ve Found 57% of America’s Best Income Stocks in One Industry

By Nathan Slaughter – globaldividends.com

Over 50% of America’s best income stocks are all located within one industry. This select group of stocks offers investors the rare opportunity to capture high yields and sizeable capital gains.

This select group of 21 stocks might be the holy grail of investments: each has delivered high yields AND sizeable capital gains.

Conventional wisdom says you have to choose one or the other. Income investors usually think they have to forfeit higher returns in exchange for a stable dividend. But that’s a misconception.

We did some research a few weeks ago to uncover the best-performing income stocks on the market. To do that, we narrowed the high-yield universe down by evaluating only stocks with yields of 6% or more. From there, we identified the standouts that earned the highest total returns over the past 10 years.

Now, everyone knows this has been a difficult stretch for most investors. In fact, some have referred to the past 10 years as the “lost decade.” But we found 21 elite stocks that made it look like we’ve been riding a non-stop bull market. Here’s a sampling of what they look like:

Hugoton Royalty (NYSE: HGT), a trust that generates 87% of its income from natural gas properties, pays a yield of 6.3% and has returned 347% since 2001.

United Online (Nasdaq: UNTD), an internet-based provider of consumer products and services, has returned 426% with help from its 7.1% dividend.

BP Prudhoe Bay (NYSE: BPT) conveys an ownership stake in oil and gas wells located in Alaska’s legendary Prudhoe Bay. Thanks to its 8.6% yield, investors have enjoyed a return of 2,320% during the last decade.

Now, I don’t have the space to go into all the details of each of the 21 best-performing stocks here. But you can visit this link to watch a presentation I recently put together that lists the names and ticker symbols of every one of these stocks.

But it’s not so much the raw list of names and tickers that I want to tell you about. Rather, I want to share an unmistakable trend that emerged as we compiled this leaderboard of high-yield winners.

 


As it turns out, 12 of the 21 best-performing income stocks in America over the past decade were pulled from the energy field. That’s 57% of the total list.

Keep in mind, the energy sector only accounts for about 15% of all domestic stocks yielding 6% or more. So for this one group to represent more than half of the biggest winners seemed highly disproportional.

That raises the question… why have dividend-paying energy stocks done so well?

It’s not just their lofty distributions. After all, every stock we examined offered a minimum 6% payout. Could it be that energy stocks in general have been on fire?

Well it turns out that yes, energy stocks have done pretty well over the past 10 years. That’s not surprising — it hasn’t been THAT long since gasoline was under $1 a gallon and oil was priced less than $30 per barrel. It makes sense that energy companies would profit handsomely in that sort of environment.

But if you dig deeper, you find an even more startling trend.

In the past 10 years, energy stocks as a whole have returned 290%… an impressive number under any condition. But, if you take that list and limit it only to dividend payers — the average return jumps to 589%.

In other words, energy stocks that pay dividends doubled the performance of what was already one of the market’s strongest sectors.

If you think about it though, this spectacular run makes sense.

Energy is in one of the biggest bull markets we’ve ever seen. But unlike some other historic bull markets, such as the high-flying “New Economy” of the late ’90s, fundamentals are driving prices this time — not delusions.

Now you may be thinking… does that mean energy has already seen its heyday?

Simple answer, I don’t think so. In fact, I think energy is still in the early innings of its bull market.

If you don’t believe me, just look at China. China’s new car sales volume in 2010 leapt 32% to 18 million new cars. That means nearly 50,000 new vehicles are hitting the road every day…

But that’s just a drop in the bucket to what we’ll see in the future. Ford (NYSE: F) projects China’s auto sales will reach 32 million by 2020 — 28% of the entire global market.

And China is not the only factor. Nor are cars and trucks the only source of demand.

Daily global oil consumption has swelled from 77 million barrels in 2001 to 89 million today. And trust me when I say that emerging market demand is pushing that burn rate straight to 100 million per day and beyond. Where will that extra 11 million barrels per day come from? Good question.

Most of the largest oil fields are in a terminal state of decline. In fact, the International Energy Association (IEA) has concluded that output from 800 top oil fields is shrinking -6.7% annually.

The combination of rising demand and thinning supplies paints a pretty clear picture. Oil prices are ultimately headed higher, or at the very least should remain elevated. So don’t let the fears of a global economic slowdown dampen your outlook.

We’ve seen record-high unemployment, sagging consumer spending, and too many corporate bankruptcies to count here in the U.S. If that weren’t enough, the market has also been rocked by violent political uprisings in the Middle East, crippling debt woes in Europe, and our own inability to corral deficit spending.

But through it all, global demand for energy has been, and continues to be staunch. In fact, we’ve only seen one decline in annual energy consumption in the past 30 years. Just one. That was a trifling -1.1% dip in 2009 as the world economy struggled to regain its footing from the worst downturn since the Great Depression.

That being said, it’s no wonder dividend-paying energy stocks have performed so well. Since dividends are such a critical tool in building wealth, it stands to reason that the energy sector, with an abundance of high yielders, is a fertile hunting ground for investors.

There are no guarantees, of course. In this market, anything can happen (as the past few months have proven). Energy prices could remain volatile as signs of economic deceleration in developed economies continue to hang over financial markets.

But looking from a long-term perspective, dwindling reserves and rising global demand will inexorably lead to higher oil prices. And judging by the last ten years of stock market data, you can only reach one conclusion: the combination of robust yield and commodity-driven share price gains seems to make good things happen time and time again.

[Note: As I said earlier, you can visit this link to watch a presentation I recently put together that lists the names and ticker symbols of every one of the 21 best-performing income stocks. I also go into more detail about many of the high-yield opportunities (including names and ticker symbols) awaiting investors in the energy field. Visit this link to watch.

Good investing!

Nathan Slaughter
Chief Investment Strategist
Energy & Income

Disclosure: Nathan Slaughter does not own shares of the securities listed in this article.

Gold “Seeing Benefit from Safe Haven Demand” as “Political Void” sees Italian Debt Yields Soar

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Wednesday 9 November, 08:15 EST

U.S. DOLLAR gold bullion prices jumped to $1797 per ounce Wednesday lunchtime in London – more than 3% up from the same point a week earlier – as the European debt crisis continued to engulf Italy.

Silver bullion also rallied around lunchtime – though it remained just below $35 per ounce, where it started today’s London session.

Italian 10-Year bond yields meantime breached 7.4%, following Wednesday morning’s announcement by clearing house LCH Clearnet SA that it will raise the amount of margin collateral Italian debt traders must posts against potential losses.

Italian 10-Year spreads over German bund yields hit 520 basis points (5.2 percentage points) – while spreads over US Treasuries approached 500 bps – as US, UK and German government bond prices all gained.

“The upwards pressure on Italian bond yields and concern generally for peripheral EU countries has increased the demand for safe haven assets and gold has benefited from that,” says James Steel, New York-based precious metals analyst at HSBC.

The Euro dropped 1.5% against the Dollar this morning, while Euro gold bullion prices climbed to €42,322 per kilogram (€1316 per ounce) – over 5% up on the same time last week.

European stock markets meantime sold off heavily, with the FTSE down 1.9% by Wednesday lunchtime – while Germany’s DAX was off 2.7%.

Gold bullion briefly breached the $1800 per ounce mark during Tuesday’s US session – before falling 1.4% in a little over two hours following news that Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi is to step down after Italy’s parliament approves new austerity measures.

Although it won Tuesday’s key budget vote, Berlusconi’s government was backed by only 308 out of 630 members – with opposition members choosing to abstain – suggesting it has lost its majority.

Italy’s president Giorgio Napolitano favors creating a national unity government along the lines of that being negotiated in Greece, according to news agency Reuters. Berlusconi, however, said Tuesday that the only option is a new election.

Over in Athens, Greece was still without a new prime minister Wednesday lunchtime, as politicians continued a third day of negotiations.

“Southern Europe steps into a political void,” says one London gold bullion dealer.

Elsewhere in Europe, Spain’s two largest lenders – Banco Santander and Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria – have announced changes to the way they calculate risk-weightings on their assets, following calls from European regulators for banks to maintain higher core capital ratios of around 9%, newswire Bloomberg reports.

So-called risk-weighted asset optimization allows banks to increase capital ratios without selling assets, reducing lending or asking shareholders for more money.

“By allowing sophisticated banks to do their own modeling, we are allowing the poacher to participate in being the gamekeeper,” says Adrian Blundell-Wignall, deputy director for financial and enterprise affairs at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

“That risks making core capital ratios useless.”

“It’s probably not the highest-quality way to move to the 9% ratio,” agrees Neil Smith, Dusseldorf-based bank analyst at German bank West LB.

Other European banks have confirmed they intend to use the practice to reach the 9% threshold – including Germany’s Commerzbank and Italy’s Unione di Banche Italiane – while Lloyds and HSBC say they have already cut risk-weighted assets by changing models.

“European banks account for more than 50% of international bank lending in all major regions of the world bar Asia, where latest data puts it at just under 45%,” says a note from Standard Bank analysts Steve Barrow and Jeremy Stevens.

“If they scale back significantly the contagion effects could be substantial. In fact, this could be more damaging to the rest of the world than the more ‘traditional’ view of contagion in which recession—and falling import demand—are seen as the main threats to non-European countries…[especially as European banks] seem most keen to slim down Dollar lending as they strive to meet new capital requirements.”

Chinese consumer price inflation meantime fell to 5.5% last month – down from 6.1% in September – according to official data published Wednesday. Producer price inflation fell even more sharply – down from 6.5% to 5.0%.

“The balance of risk for the PBOC [China’s central bank] and State Council is likely shifting to growth and away from inflation,” reckons Tim Condon, Singapore-based head of Asian economic research at ING.

“Lower inflationary pressure leaves room for further policy fine tuning,” adds Zhang Zhiwei, chief economist China at Nomura in Hong Kong.

“The PBOC has already marginally loosened liquidity by open market operations in October…we expect this type of fine-tuning to continue, but [reserve requirement ratios] and interest rates will be kept unchanged for the rest of 2011.”

China’s central bank has raised interest rates five times since last October – the last hike coming in July, when the one year deposit rate was raised to 3.5%.

Over in New York, the world’s largest gold ETF, the SPDR Gold Trust (ticker GLD), has seen a net inflow over the past week. The gross tonnage of gold bullion held to back GLD shares rose to 1264.1 tonnes yesterday – a 1.7% rise from this time last week.

Ben Traynor
BullionVault

Gold value calculator   |   Buy gold online at live prices

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics.

(c) BullionVault 2011

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

Personalized Medicine: The Future of Healthcare

The Future of Healthcare: Personalized Medicine

by Marc Lichtenfeld, Investment U Senior Analyst
Wednesday, November 9, 2011: Issue #1639

I just got back from my annual physical. Fortunately, everything was fine. But my experience solidified my belief that one of the major healthcare trends that will emerge is the concept of personalized medicine.

I had been going to the same doctor every year since 2003. He’s a good guy and has helped me when I’ve been sick. But when I went for my physical every year, he’d tell me to watch my cholesterol, turn my head and cough, and that was pretty much the end of it.

This year, I changed doctors. The practice I go to takes a more holistic approach. No, they’re not burning incense and the place doesn’t smell like patchouli. They’re still MDs and they actually practice real medicine and science. Perhaps even more so then many other physicians. When they look at your blood work, they really look at your blood work.

They not only told me what my cholesterol level was, they told me my Vitamin B12, Vitamin D, testosterone and many other levels that could suggest there is a problem or might be the key to solving an issue (there weren’t any, thankfully).

The doctor then actually spent time explaining the numbers, discussing preventative care and why certain other tests aren’t necessary.

He made it very clear that I was a patient under his care and we would work together to solve any future problems. I wasn’t simply a name on an electronic record.

Better Health = Better Wealth

Like any other business, customers these days are more demanding. They want better service and a more personalized experience. Many patients are frustrated with the notion that their doctor will listen to them for 10 minutes then write out a prescription and be done (after a 45-minute stay in the waiting room beforehand).

Personalized medicine can deliver that kind of attention that many patients crave.

Not only should it lead to better health, but it can also lead to wealth. The personalized medicine trend is in its infancy and there are quite a few companies and industries poised to benefit.

  • Laboratories – Patients aren’t just going in for cholesterol and PSA tests anymore. As I mentioned, I had all kinds of things screened including various nutrients and hormones. Quest Diagnostics (NYSE: DGX) and Laboratory Corp. (NYSE: LH) are the two largest, yet have less than 25-percent market share combined. There’s a lot of room for long-term growth in these two names.
  • Natural Foods – Many people are trying to eat healthier in order to prevent disease. Whole Foods’ (Nasdaq: WFMI) fourth-quarter earnings jumped 27 percent and same store sales rose 8.7 percent. Despite a sluggish economy, it appears those with money are serious about trying to eat healthier and better quality foods.
  • Along the same lines, United Natural Foods (Nasdaq: UNFI) is expected to grow earnings by 13 percent in 2012 and 14 percent in 2013. If the economy picks up, I suspect those numbers will be conservative.
  • Athletic gear – Sporting goods aren’t just for soccer playing teens. Men and women are participating in sports into their eighties. And they have to get their gear and equipment somewhere.
  • Lululemon (Nasdaq: LULU) makes expensive clothes for practitioners of yoga. The stock has been ridiculously hot for several years now. But with earnings expected to rise 45 percent in fiscal 2012, there’s no reason why the shares should slow down any time soon. Is it expensive? You bet your bhujangasana it is. But stocks have a way of staying overvalued (or undervalued) much longer than anyone expects they will. As long as Lululemon keeps delivering stellar results, the stock should continue to move higher.

I will be writing a lot more about personalized medicine over the coming months. There are some amazing new technologies that I’m going to be studying and talking to the management teams behind them.

Look for updates in 2012 on some amazing new developments in the world of healthcare. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have to go take my vitamin D3.

Good investing,

Marc Lichtenfeld

Article by Investment U

Baldassarri Says Italy Must Give Reason to Back Bonds

Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) — Italian Senate Finance Committee Chairman Mario Baldassarri discusses Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s resignation offer and the European Central Bank’s backing of Italian bonds. He talks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Maersk’s Andersen Expects `Difficult’ Start to 2012

Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) — Nils Smedegaard Andersen, chief executive officer A.P. Moeller-Maersk A/S, discusses the outlook for the container shipping industry and oil demand. Maersk’s shipping unit posted a third-quarter net loss of 1.58 billion kroner ($293 million) compared with a profit of 5.9 billion kroner a year earlier. Andersen talks from Copenhagen with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Italy 10-Year Yield Climbs Above 7% as Berlusconi Quits

Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) — The yield on 10-year Italian bonds rose to more than 7 percent, 5 percentage points higher than similar-maturity benchmark German bunds, as Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s offer to resign left the nation seeking a government capable of implementing austerity measures to reduce borrowing costs. Maryam Nemazee reports on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Consolidation is the Tone of the FX Markets

By ForexYard

Since last week’s bout of USD strength the major currencies continue to trade in defined ranges as market players look for the next big event which could come from Europe.

Economic News

EUR – Berlusconi to Step Down

Italy has become the latest EU nation to have changed leaders following Greece, Portugal, Ireland, and Spain. Could Italy also be the next EU member to receive a financial bailout?

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi succeeded in passing a budget proposal but failed to win an absolute majority in the Italian parliament. Following this defeat in parliament Berlusconi promised he would resign from office after the 2012 budget is approved.

The announcement by Berlusconi helped to support the EUR and the EUR/USD bounced above the 1.3800 level though the pair remains confined to a roughly 160 pip range. Resistance is found at last week’s high of 1.3860 with support at the rising trend line on the hourly chart which comes in at 1.3705. A breakout below this support may see a retest of the October low at 1.3160.

Consolidation remains the tone for the forex markets as traders look for the next major market moving event. Perhaps this will come in the form of Italy accepting some sort of EU support? For the second day in a row Italian bond yields reached a new EMU high with the 10-year bond yield climbing to a record 6.77%.

GBP – UK Economic Data Drags

Yesterday’s manufacturing production numbers from September were the first increase in the report over the past four months though the data is nothing to brag home about. Retail sales numbers for October dropped a sharp -0.6% on a year-over year basis. The weak data combined with inflation that has risen as high as 5.2% is a sign of an economy that is suffering from stagflation, a combination of weak growth and rising inflation.

Despite the poor performance of the UK economy sterling continues to move higher versus both the EUR and USD. The GBP/USD is approaching its 200-day moving average at 1.6150 and the October high of 1.6165. Support is back at 1.6060 from the rising support line on the hourly chart since the start of the month.

JPY – First Sign of Life in USD/JPY after Intervention

Yesterday during the New York trading session we had the first movement in USD/JPY following Monday’s intervention. The USD/JPY fell to a low of 77.60. This level also happens to be the post intervention low. Up until this afternoon the USD/JPY was trading in a tight 20 pip range.

The drop in the pair is one sign the most recent attempt by the Ministry of Finance (MOF) to weaken the JPY has failed. The slow grind lower in the pair may continue until the next quarter when Japanese exporters and corporations need to change their dollars for earning season and the Japanese will intervene once again. Perhaps the MOF should take a page from the playbook of the SNB who chose to weaken the CHF in the FX swaps and forward markets rather than the spot market.

Gold – Gold Prices Continue their Recovery

Spot gold prices continue to recover from their September lows as events in Europe have boosted demand for the commodity. The safe haven asset continues to gain in the cloudy macroeconomic environment, rising above $1,800 yesterday.

Growth is beginning to slow in the euro zone and European PMI surveys hint at below average Q4 GDP. ECB President Mario Draghi told reporters that the euro zone economy may slip to a mild recession. Events in Greece and Italy have also kept financial markets uneasy, possibility increasing demand as a safe haven asset. As events in Europe continue to weigh on market sentiment, spot gold prices may continue to receive a bid.

Technical News

EUR/USD

After the pair recovered to its long term trend line from the June low the EUR/USD failed to move above the previously broken trend line which turned into a resistance level. Weekly stochastiscs have rolled lower and point to additional declines in the pair. Initial support is found at last week’s low of 1.3600 and a break here could have the pair testing the October low of 1.3145. Resistance is located at the 200-week moving average at 1.3980 followed by the October high of 1.4250.

GBP/USD

The GBP/USD continues to be buoyant with the pair forming a base at its 55-day moving average at 1.5860, though weekly stochastics are beginning to cross which hints at a decline in the price. A break below last week’s low of 1.5875 could have scope to 1.5630 from the October 18th low, a level that is close to the 61% Fibonacci retracement from the October bullish move. Resistance is capped at the pair’s 200-day moving average near 1.6140, followed by 1.6530 off of the trend line from the April and the August highs.

USD/JPY

The MOF intervened in the market when the USD/JPY was at a new all-time low and ensured that both the weekly and monthly candlesticks would make an outside day up, a bullish candlestick. However, the failure of the pair to break above the falling trend line off of the 2007 and 2010 highs show the long term downtrend remains intact. Initial support is found at 77.80 from the September high followed by 77.50. The resistive trend line comes in at 79.50.

USD/CHF

A cross of the 50-day moving average above the 200-day moving average will likely take place within the next few days and is a bullish technical move. Initial resistance is found from the October 20th high of 0.9080 followed by the October high of 0.9310. Support is back at Thursday/Friday’s low of 0.8760 followed by the October low of 0.8565.

The Wild Card

NZD/USD

The kiwi is currently consolidating but daily stochastics for the NZD/USD are moving higher. The pair is finding resistance at 0.8000, an important technical level. Not only is this a big round number which many traders use to place stops and limit orders, but it is also where the 20-day and 200-day moving averages are found. Forex traders should note that a break above this level could see the pair rise to 0.8170 where the trend line off of the August and October high. Support is back at the November low of 0.7800.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

Italian Concerns Begin to Weigh on EUR

Source: ForexYard

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Events in Italy came to a head this morning as Italian bonds plummeted and pulled down the EUR in a dramatic price drop.

The trigger for the drop in Italian bond prices was the announcement by LCH Clearnet SA, a major clearer of Italian bonds would increase the margin requirements by almost double. Following the announcement yields on Italian government debt reached new highs with the 10-year BTP trading at 7.41%. Spreads of the 10-year BTP/Bund are wider by 14.3% at 568 bp.

The EUR is down sharply versus the USD and in the crosses. The EUR/USD has broken below its rising support line from the November low and is quickly approaching this level at 1.3607. A break here would open the door to additional declines to 1.3525. Should the USD hold its gains the daily candlestick will form an outside day down, a bearish technical indicator.

Also the EUR/GBP has moved below its rising trend line from the June 2010 low but has managed to retrace some of its losses with the BOE set to meet tomorrow. A close below 0.8550 would increase bearish technical sentiment. A lack of support is apparent on the charts and the pair could eventually slip to the 2011 low at 0.8280.

Read more forex trading news on our forex blog.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

USD/CHF Could Break Higher

Source: ForexYard

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A combination of short term USD strength and expectations of additional SNB action may propel the USD/CHF above the approaching resistance.

Yesterday SNB Governor Thomas Jordan did his best to back down market expectations of another move by the SNB to raise the floor underneath the EUR/CHF exchange rate. Following Thomas’ comments the CHF strengthened accordingly. Thomas suggested that the floor is temporary but the SNB is not likely to back down from its program to weaken the CHF. This is especially true given the deflationary forces that are apparent in the Swiss economy.

As such the USD/CHF is currently approaching resistance of 0.9080 off of the October 20th high. A break here and the pair could move towards the October high of 0.9318. Support is back at the 20-day moving average of 0.8870.

Read more forex trading news on our forex blog.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.