Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

5 low-debt stocks for ‘Higher for longer’ run

- JOHN DORFMAN INVESTING John Dorfman is chairman of Dorfman Value Investment­s LLC in Boston, and a syndicated columnist. His firm or clients may own or trade securities discussed in this column. He can be reached at jdorfman@ dorfmanval­ue.com.

JEROME Powell, head of the Federal Reserve, made it official a few days ago: “Higher for longer” interest rates are the policy of the nation’s central bank, and that’s likely to last for at least several months.

The cost of carrying debt is now biting companies harder than it did in the past half-dozen years. So it makes sense to look at low-debt stocks.

Frankly, I prefer low debt in any environmen­t. But when borrowing money is cheap, high-debt stocks sometimes frolic. In my view, that time has passed.

Here are five companies that have little or no debt, and whose stocks I suggest for serious considerat­ion:

Cognizant

Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. (CTSH), based in Teaneck, New Jersey, is an informatio­n technology (IT) services provider.

Among the companies it serves (or has recently served) are Comcast, JP Morgan, Walgreens and Walmart.

Over the past decade, Cognizant’s revenue has climbed about 10 percent a year. Debt is only 10 percent of stockholde­rs’ equity.

Incyte

A pharmaceut­ical company that concentrat­es on cancer treatment, inflammati­on and autoimmuni­ty, Incyte Corp. (INCY) has been profitable in only seven of the past 10 years.

The company develops drugs, markets some of them itself, and assigns marketing rights to others (typically with larger pharmaceut­ical firms). Over the past 10 years, Incyte’s revenue growth has averaged 21 percent a year.

Mueller Industries

I’ve recommende­d Mueller Industries Inc. (MLI) several times in this column. It’s a metal-bender, perhaps best known for making refrigerat­or coils.

The company hails from Colliervil­le, Tennessee, and has posted a profit in each of the past 30 years, including the recession year of 2008 and the pandemic year of 2020. Debt is only 1 percent of equity, and the company has more than $39 in cash for each dollar of debt.

Cal-maine Foods

There’s no debt whatsoever at Calmaine Foods Inc. (CALM) of Ridgeland, Mississipp­i. It’s the largest U.S. egg producer, with roughly 20 million laying hens.

The prices that Cal-maine can get at the grocery store vary over time, but a bigger variation is in costs. When the price of chicken food (mainly corn) rises, costs go up. Results are also affected when avian flu hits the flocks.

So, profits vary a lot from year to year.

Alpha Metallurgi­cal

Yes, coal is a dying industry — for better or for worse. But it won’t die fast. U.S. energy needs continue to grow, thanks partly to power-guzzling data centers. Coal remains an important source of electrical power and is also necessary for the production of steel.

Alpha Metallurgi­cal Resources Inc. (AMR), based in Bristol, Tennessee, mines coal in Virginia and West Virginia. The stock sells for less than seven times earnings, and the company’s debt is less than 1 percent of equity.

The Record

This column is the 22nd one I’ve written about low-debt stocks, beginning in 1998.

My picks in the first 21 columns have chalked up an average 12-month return of 24.8 percent. That is far above the average return on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Total Return Index for the same periods, which was 11.1 percent.

Fifteen of my 21 sets of recommenda­tions have been profitable, and 13 have beaten the S&P 500.

My picks from a year ago rose 16.8 percent, but failed to beat the benchmark, which zoomed ahead 25.8 percent. My best pick was Teradyne Inc., up 32.3 percent. My worst was Moderna Inc., down 5.1 percent.

Let’s see if my new crop can make some money and beat the index.

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