Daily Press (Sunday)

The 26 stocks I own personally and for clients

- John Dorfman John Dorfman is chairman of Dorfman Value Investment­s in Newton Upper Falls, Massachuse­tts. His firm or clients may own or trade the stocks discussed here. He can be reached at jdorfman@dorfmanval­ue. com.

I recommend about

250 stocks a year in this column, but in a typical client portfolio, I own only 20 to 30 stocks. Readers sometimes are curious about which stocks I own. Here’s a rundown on my current holdings.

Communicat­ions

The world clamors for American entertainm­ent and informatio­n. I own Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL), for its relentless innovation, Paramount Global (PARA) for its trove of movies and TV shows, and Walt Disney Co. (DIS) for its synergy with theme parks, movies, and characters.

Consumer discretion­ary

The sell-off in housing stocks bothers me, but I believe it’s overdone and am retaining D.R. Horton Inc. (DHI). The same goes for MarineMax

Inc. (HZO), the leading retailer of pleasure boats. America’s Car-Mart Inc. (CRMT), which sells used cars, has a long record of consistent profitabil­ity.

Consumer staples

For a long time, I resisted consumer staples stocks, since I think people pay too much for their presumptiv­e stability. Recently, however, I bought Tyson Foods Inc.

(TSN), which I think is a bargain at less than eight times earnings. Tyson is the nation’s largest producer of beef and chicken.

Energy

Energy stocks have been the only bastion of strength this year in a weak market. I own three: Dril-Quip Inc. (DRQ), Pioneer Natural Resources Co. (PXD) and Total Energies SE (TTE). Most of the money is in Pioneer. With oil near $120 a barrel, I think profits will be solid in 2022 and 2023.

Financial

At this moment, the only financial stock I own is Berkshire Hathaway Inc., the redoubt of the redoubtabl­e Warren Buffett. I’m considerin­g some regional bank stocks, but haven’t pulled the trigger.

Health care

I don’t expect a recession this year, but I figure the odds of one have crept up to about 40% from about 10%, as inflation roars and the Federal Reserve puts the brakes on the economy.

Accordingl­y, I’m now holding four health-care stocks, since these tend to be defensive in down markets.

Edwards Lifescienc­es Corp. (EW) makes artificial heart valves. Pfizer Inc. (PFE) is a leader in vaccines. Sonic Healthcare Ltd. (SKHHY), based in Australia, is the numberthre­e test lab in the U.S. and number one in several other countries. Zoetis Inc. (ZTS) makes medication­s for pets and farm animals.

Industrial­s

I’m often heavy in industrial stocks, but not so now, with the Fed hitting the brakes. General Dynamics Corp. (GD), a leading defense contractor, seems to fit these perilous times. Snap-On Inc. (SNA), which makes car-repair tools, may benefit from the transition to electronic cars.

Sterling Infrastruc­ture Inc. (STRL), which builds or repairs bridges and tunnels, should benefit from increased federal spending on those items.

Materials

In times of inflation, metals and mining stocks frequently do well. I have three in my satchel: Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. (CLF), which mines iron and makes steel, Nucor Corp. (NUE), the nation’s largest steel producer, and SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), which holds physical gold.

Technology

This year, technology stocks have taken it on the chin worse than other groups. But the previous three years, they were the market leaders. In my opinion, many tech stocks have gone all the way from overvalued to undervalue­d during the past six months.

My current tech holdings are:

Apple Inc. (AAPL),

which has a loyal following and a fortress balance sheet with $51 billion in cash and

marketable securities.

Lam Research Corp. (LRCX), a specialist in etching semiconduc­tor chips.

Logitech Internatio­nal SA (LOGI), a Swiss maker of computer peripheral­s such as mice and keyboards.

Sony Group Corp. (SONY), which is classified as a technology stock, but is more a conglomera­te. It makes the PlayStatio­n and parts for iPhones, and runs a movie studio.

Texas Instrument­s Inc. (TXN) is more expensive than I usually go for, but is an immensely profitable semiconduc­tor manufactur­er.

Most managers use the classifica­tion system devised by Standard & Poor’s, which puts companies into 11 sectors. Nine sectors were covered above. I have no holdings at present in the real estate or utility sectors.

The record

In almost every column, I give the performanc­e of past column recommenda­tions. I always say that “these results shouldn’t be confused with the performanc­e of accounts I manage for clients.”

However, today’s column is about the stocks I actually do own for clients. Therefore, here is my firm’s performanc­e for the 22

¼ years through March 2022. On an aggregate of individual accounts, we are up 592% (including dividends), versus 371% for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index. Past performanc­e doesn’t predict future returns.

Disclosure: I own each of the stocks discussed today personally and for most of my clients.

 ?? JHVEPHOTO/ISTOCK EDITORIAL FILE VIA GETTY ?? Alphabet, the informatio­n and technology giant that owns Google, should perform well over time because of its relentless innovation.
JHVEPHOTO/ISTOCK EDITORIAL FILE VIA GETTY Alphabet, the informatio­n and technology giant that owns Google, should perform well over time because of its relentless innovation.
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