Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Investors should target these 10 stocks in 2019

- PERSONAL FINANCE John Dorfman is chairman of Dorfman Value Investment­s LLC in Newton Upper Falls, Massachuse­tts, and a syndicated columnist. His firm or clients may own or trade securities discussed in this column. He can be reached at jdorfman@dorfmanval

Li Ka-shing is sometimes called the Warren Buffett of China. Warren Buffett himself is the most celebrated investor in the U.S.

Companies built by these two famous investors are among my 10 favorite stocks for 2019.

Li’s son, Li Tzar Kuoi, known as Victor, now runs CK Asset Holdings Ltd. Management, the real estate arm of Li’s empire. It owns office buildings, hotels and residentia­l complexes in Hong Kong and worldwide.

It also does real estate brokerage, manages properties, leases aircraft, and runs utilities.

The trade war currently depressing stocks in both the United States and China qualifies as “bad news that is real but temporary,” my mantra for a situation that creates an investment opportunit­y.

Some reasons I like CK Asset are an extremely cheap stock price (five times recent earnings), low debt and a dividend yield of 3 percent.

Berkshire Hathaway

As for Warren Buffett’s flagship company, if you had invested $10,000 in it 30 years ago and held on, you would now have $627,053, compared with $161,370 if you had chosen an index fund that tracks the S&P 500.

JOHN DORFMAN

Along the way, you would have had the privilege of reading Buffett’s annual reports, masterpiec­es of pithy insight and wry humor.

Antero Resources

Slammed by tax-loss selling late this year, the natural gas producer has fallen to about $9.21 a share. It was over $60 five years ago. The company is buying back its own stock like crazy, and my hunch is that we will not have a fourth consecutiv­e warm winter.

Apple

How would you like to pay only 13 times earnings for a company with astounding profit margins? You can do that at the moment with Apple Inc., and in my opinion, it would be missing an opportunit­y not to.

Disney

I like the synergies among Disney’s three traditiona­l divisions — movies, theme parks and licensed merchandis­e depicting beloved characters like Mickey Mouse or the mermaid Ariel. But the company has grown more complex.

It owns ABC television, 80 percent of the ESPN sports network, the Disney Channel, Pixar, Marvel Entertainm­ent and Lucasfilm. Investors fret that Disney overpaid for some of its properties and that ABC is struggling. Maybe so, but if these problems allow me to purchase Disney for 15 times earnings, I’m happy.

General Dynamics

Early this year, shares in this major defense contractor sold for $222. Today’s they sell for about $155. Among the reasons: increased competitio­n in business jets (an important sideline), fear that a Democratic House of Representa­tives will cut defense spending and, of course, a general stock decline.

I regard the company as one of the best managed of the defense contractor­s.

Sanderson Farms

The long-term trend in the U.S. is for people to eat more chicken and less beef. I often like Sanderson Farms Inc., a chicken producer based in Laurel, Mississipp­i.

It had a tough year last year; chicken prices fell about 25 percent. I think that’s unlikely to happen again. I like this debt-free company trading at 0.7 times revenue.

Sony

Sony Corp. is a diversifie­d Japanese electronic­s company. It makes the popular PlayStatio­n video game machine, produces parts for iPhones and runs a major movie studio, among other activities. Profits in fiscal 2018 were the best in years, and analysts expect another 35 percent increase in fiscal 2019. Yet the stock sells for only 10 times earnings.

SPDR Gold Trust

A trust that holds physical gold, SPDR Gold Trust is a convenient way for individual­s to own gold without directly paying for a storage vault and insurance. It has declined about 5 percent this year, but I like it as a hedge against internatio­nal turmoil or inflation.

Walgreens Boots

Another defensive holding is Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc., a huge chain of drugstores in the U.S. and Britain. Once someone comes into a drugstore to fill a prescripti­on, they often linger to buy detergent or a candy bar, so sales tend to be extremely steady. Earnings were up sharply last fiscal year and are expected to rise another 8 percent or so this fiscal year.

Past record

How much attention should you pay to these recommenda­tions? That’s a tough question.

My record as an investment manager suggests you should give them serious considerat­ion. My composite of individual accounts is up 480 percent in 18 ¾ years, versus 185 percent for the S&P 500 Index.

But my record in this column on my “Top Ten for the New Year” is uninspired — up an average of 4.6 percent a year versus 8.6 percent for the market.

Bear in mind that my column recommenda­tions are theoretica­l and don’t reflect actual trades, trading costs or taxes. Their results shouldn’t be confused with the performanc­e of portfolios I manage for clients.

And, of course, past performanc­e doesn’t predict future results.

Disclosure: I own each of the 10 stocks discussed today, for clients and personally.

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