4 Unstoppable Megatrend Stocks to Buy Now (and 2 to Avoid)

You’ve no doubt seen tons of articles splashed across the Web (over)hyping the hottest investing trends to jump on now. But which promising technologies can we actually tap for payouts and dividends (preferably today)?

The “mainstream” list is endless: cryptocurrencies, marijuana stocks—even gene editing (where the white coats actually alter DNA to wipe out diseases like cystic fibrosis).

I hope you’re not taking the bait, because gambling on shaky themes like these can put a huge dent in your nest egg. Check out the stomach-churning ride pot stock Aurora Cannabis (ACBFF) has been on this year:

Aurora’s Bad Trip

That nasty fall even includes a 19% gain last week after Constellation Brands (STZ) invested $5 billion in Canopy Growth (CGC), the biggest marijuana stock by market cap.

And don’t even get me started on Bitcoin!

Bitcoin Crushes Retirement Dreams

Of course, we know neither of these wagers will put dividend cash in our pockets.

Big-Picture Thinking Is Key

That’s why, if you want to profit from huge trends remaking society, you need to zero in on megatrends like exploding energy demand, surging online shopping and retiring baby boomers. Shifts like these will power our price gains and dividends (with yields up to 9.2%, as I’ll show you below)—for decades.

Today we’re going to dive into 4 of these megatrends, plus my 4 top stock picks for cashing in on each one, starting with…

The Megatrend: The Web Beats Brick and Mortar

If you watch CNBC, you’ve may have heard Mad Money host Jim Cramer preach about the stay-at-home economy, where more folks entertain themselves, shop and order meals from home instead of going out.

And he’s right.

You only need to look at the sales of Netflix (NFLX), in blue below, and Amazon.com (AMZN), in red, over the last five years compared to their brick-and-mortar counterparts, AMC Entertainment Holdings (AMC) and Wal-Mart (WMT).

Online Sellers Pull Ahead

Too bad many of Cramer’s top “stay-at-home” stocks, like Take-Two Interactive Software (TTWO) and ConAgra Brands (CAG)—the latter due to its frozen-food business—pay low (or no) dividends. Heck, CAG even recently cut its payout!

CAG’s Stale Dividend

That’s far from the case for my favorite way to play this trend.

The Stock: Duke Realty

Imagine being Amazon’s landlord—collecting rent as the e-commerce giant spreads across the world … filling your warehouses as it does.

Well, imagine no more, because you can start (indirectly) collecting those checks through Duke Realty (DRE), a 46-year-old real estate investment trust (REIT) with 499 warehouses in 20 markets.

Amazon is Duke’s No. 1 tenant, and the REIT knows its best customer well, having worked with the online retailer for more than a decade:

A “Prime” E-Commerce Play

Source: Duke Realty NAREIT REIT Week Presentation

You are only getting a 2.8% dividend yield here, but Duke has been raising the payout in recent years and handed shareholders a nice $0.85 special dividend last December, after unloading its medical-office business.

That was a canny move that frees up management to smoke out more opportunities in its core warehouse operation.

The payout was the second special dividend in three years—and Duke can do much more, with the regular dividend eating up just 52% of funds from operations (FFO, the REIT equivalent of earnings per share), a very low ratio for a REIT.

Finally, Duke trades at 21.7-times the midpoint of management’s just-boosted 2018 FFO forecast. That’s still a decent level for a company that truly is Amazon’s landlord. You won’t find a more direct tie to the online shopping megatrend than that—and it will light up Duke’s share price and dividend for decades to come.

The Megatrend: Aging Baby Boomers

No matter what happens with the Affordable Care Act, we can be sure of one thing: healthcare spending will keep spiking higher. There’s no other way for it to go!

According to recent numbers from the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services, the nation will spend 5.5% more on healthcare every year through 2026. By then, we’ll be dropping $5.6 trillion on it annually.

Much of that rise will come from huge increases in costs for Medicare (up 7.4% annually) and Medicaid (up 5.8% a year). I don’t have to tell you who’s driving that increase: boomers, 10,000 of whom are turning 65 every day.

The Stock: Physicians Realty Trust

Our play to watch on retiring boomers is Physicians Realty Trust (DOC), which has 249 medical-office buildings, almost all of which (96%) are rented out to doctors, hospitals and healthcare systems.

One thing I love about DOC is its long tenant list, with no one client chipping in more than 6% of annualized base rent. That means the REIT avoids getting stuck with a big, trouble-prone tenant, a problem that’s beggared healthcare REITs in the past.

Here’s another plus: its tenants specialize in the services elderly folks need most, like orthopedic surgery and oncology, so you can bet its buildings will stay full.

Which brings me to the trust’s dividend, which clocks in at a gaudy 5.5%. And before you ask, yes, that payout is safe, accounting for a manageable (especially for a well-run REIT like DOC) 86% of FFO.

The real kicker is that you can buy in at just 16-times FFO. That’s a smoking deal, given DOC’s top-notch portfolio, price upside from the “gray wave” that’s surging our way, and it’s superb 5.5% dividend.

The Megatrend: Soaring Energy Demand

The strong global economy is goosing energy use, with demand rising 2.1% last year, doubling 2016’s rate, according to the International Energy Association.

All sources of power saw higher demand: coal, natural gas, oil and renewables. And that trend will continue: the US Energy Information Administration sees global energy demand spiking 28% by 2040.

The Stock: Duff & Phelps Global Utility Fund

Our play here is the Duff & Phelps Global Utility Fund (DPG), a closed-end fund (CEF) that owns major US utilities like NextEra Energy (NEE) and Enterprise Products Partners (EPD), along with big global names like French electric utility ENGIE (ENGI) and Canadian telecom BCE (BCE).

Two numbers stick out here. The first is DPG’s outsized 9.2% dividend, which is as consistent as they come.

A Retirement-Friendly Payout

Source: CEFConnect.com

The other? DPG trades at a ridiculous 10.1% discount to net asset value (NAV). That’s another way of saying that its market price is lagging the value of its portfolio by 10.1%. And since this fund has traded at narrower discounts (and even premiums) in the past, we can expect price upside as that markdown narrows.

But even if it stays where it is, you’re still getting 9.2% every year in cash. That discount also helps steady the dividend. Because while DPG’s yield on market price is 9.2%, its yield on NAV is 8.2%, a figure that’s easier for management to cover with investment returns.

The Megatrend: US Economic Growth

Finally, while I’d never go as far as to say recessions are a thing of the past, as my colleague Michael Foster recently reported, US economic numbers are sparkling. And I’m betting we’ve got plenty of room to run.

To wit:

  • The economy grew 4.1% in the second quarter, the fastest since 2014.
  • The unemployment rate fell to 3.9%, near 18-year lows.
  • According to FactSet, 73% of S&P 500 companies are reporting second-quarter sales that top analysts’ expectations.

So we’re going to bet on the roaring economy with a fund that gives us “one-click” exposure to the picks of one Warren E. Buffett.

The Stock: Boulder Growth & Income Fund

You won’t find a bigger cheerleader for America’s economy than Buffett, and that

shows up in the stock portfolio of Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A), which is riddled with US success stories like Apple (AAPL), Costco Wholesale (COST) and Johnson & Johnson (JNJ).

And thanks to a CEF called the Boulder Growth & Income Fund (BIF), you can get access to Berkshire itself and Buffett’s top picks, while pocketing a 3.7% dividend—more than twice the payout on the average S&P 500 stock.

The best part: BIF is far cheaper than it should be, trading at a 15% discount to NAV, which basically means you can buy every dollar of the shares BIF holds for 85 cents.

As with DPG, that markdown builds in price upside as it erodes away, as it’s been steadily doing for more than two years.

Investors Slowly Catch on to BIF

That narrowing markdown has helped BIF crush the market as a whole.

Shrinking Discount Slingshots BIF Higher

The bottom line?

I expect BIF’s discount to keep narrowing (and its outperformance to continue) as the US economy rolls on and more folks realize how easy it is to double their dividends by swapping their miserly blue chips for this Buffett-friendly fund.

That means your buy window is still open—but it may not be for long.

Yours Now: An Entire 19-Stock Portfolio With Safe Cash Payouts Up to 10.4%

As I showed you above, REITs and CEFs are the solution to your income worries if you feel trapped “grinding out” dividend income with the pathetic sub-2% payouts paid by your typical stock.

And the great thing—as you can see with BIF and DPG—is that you can often make the switch to these cash-rich dividend buys without actually switching investments!

$40,000 in Income on $500k

I’ve got 6 more life-changing dividend plays to give you—all REITs and CEFs—that tap into the same bulletproof trends as the 4 picks above, with one crucial difference:

I’ve hand-picked these 6 dividend powerhouses to give you a steady $40,000 a year in income on a $500k nest egg! That’s an 8% average yield—and it’s why I call this my “8% No-Withdrawal Portfolio.” I can’t wait to show it to you.

That’s not all, either.

Because I just released a NEW issue of my Contrarian Income Report newsletter, with fresh updates on the 19 stocks and funds in our service’s portfolio, which hands our savvy CIR members massive yields up to 10.4%!

I want to send all 19 of these cash-rich plays your way, too. This latest issue just went out to members a few days ago, and your copy is waiting for you now.

Editor's Note: The stock market is way up – and that’s terrible news for us dividend investors. Yields haven’t been this low in decades! But there are still plenty of great opportunities to secure meaningful income if you know where to look. Brett Owens' latest report reveals how you can easily (and safely) rake in 8%+ dividends and never worry about drawing down your capital again. Click here for full details!

Source: Contrarian Outlook 

Market Preview:Earnings from TJX, Kohl’s and Target, Mixed with Housing Numbers Mid-week

With the S&P 500 trading near record highs set at the beginning of the year, the market rallied further on Monday. Much of the action was based on a glimmer of hope in the U.S. / China trade war. Low-level officials began negotiations on what investors hope will be the genesis of a solution to tariff escalations on both sides.  Shares of Tesla battled back into positive territory at over $308 after Mr. Musk’s beleaguered company briefly dropped below $290 early in the session. Doubts are rising that the electric car company can be taken private, and a consensus is starting to build that the outspoken CEO should either step down or take a leave of absence to give the stock time to settle.

After Estee Lauder’s (EL) strong report Monday morning, investors will be looking for more strong numbers as the retail earnings parade continues this week. Tuesday analysts will parse earnings from both TJX Companies (TJX) and Kohl’s Corporation (KSS). Kohl’s grew same-store sales 3.6% last quarter but gave guidance for a flat Q2. Analysts will be looking for the clothing and home goods retailer to control inventory to drive earnings growth. With strong reported U.S. retail sales in clothing and clothing accessories, both TJX and Kohl’s could pleasantly surprise investors with earnings beats this quarter.

Tuesday investors will get to compare their favorite retailer’s earnings with the Redbook retail sales numbers. The report tracks comparable store sales at chain stores, discounters and department stores. Year-over-year retail sales are expected to rise 4.5%. On Wednesday analysts will take a short break from retail sales and focus on housing data. Wednesday morning existing home sales for July are expected to be a slight improvement over the June release. New mortgage application numbers will also be released. Analysts are trying to get a handle on how housing will impact the economy in the second half of the year, and these numbers may provide some direction. Also released on Wednesday afternoon will be the minutes from the last FOMC meeting. Investors do not expect any surprises as the Fed has been telegraphing its moves in a straightforward manner this year.

Wednesday earnings include numbers from Lowe’s (LOW) and Target (TGT). Investors will be focused on comparable store sales at Lowe’s after Home Depot (HD) blew this number out of the water earlier this earnings season. Both stores indicated that buyers were purchasing spring items later than usual this year, leading to more sales in Q2 than usual. Analysts will be expecting good numbers from new CEO Marvin Ellison. The market is also expecting positive news from Target which is trading near multi-year highs. Analysts will be looking to see if in-store traffic continued to accelerate at the same torrid pace as last quarter, or if this number is flattening. Anything less than a blowout quarter will be disappointing.

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