By Eric M. Clark, Accuvest

At the end of each year, many people focus on things like wrapping up business and last minute holiday shopping. Shopping has never been my favorite thing, shopping in advance is even less interesting to me. Because of Amazon however, shopping is now fun, swift, and convenient.

Even if I don’t do all my shopping on Amazon, this amazing company has woken up virtually every other retailer so my options are only limited by the time I have to search & review potential items. What a wonderful development for those of us that do not enjoy shopping for hours at a time. As I was doing my research this year a thought occurred to me:

  • What would an investment portfolio have yielded over 10 years if it were built to invest in the leading brands across important spending categories? 
  • Would that portfolio offer excess returns over the S&P 500?
  • Most importantly, would the portfolio generate gains that could offset my spending on my favorite brands and their products/services?

Given that I’m a Portfolio Manager of a global brands strategy, we all know the answers to these questions but I thought it would be fun to highlight a “hind-sight portfolio” as an illustration that a CONSUMER allocation to consumer-focused stocks can add value to a portfolio because 1. I like knowing what I own and why I own it and 2. because it literally can pay for your spending on your favorite brands by potentially adding capital gains, long-term.  First, here’s a good guide on where the average person spends his/her money:

Here’s our illustrative, hind-sight portfolio. Let’s call it the Consumer Spending 20 Investment Portfolio.  20 stocks, equal-weighted, bought and held for 10 years, no trading, no reinvesting dividends, just buy and hold.  We’ll start with a hypothetical $100,000 portfolio so 5% positions to start ($5k each).  Here’s some important spending categories or industries and the leading brand chosen as the proxy investment for each category:

  • Managed healthcare – United Healthcare– Sadly, it’s an enormous part of the average person’s monthly disposable income these days
  • Online retail and now organic grocery via Whole Foods – Amazon– It’s now the part of the year where we get an Amazon box literally every day
  • Coffee & fast casual restaurants – Starbucks– The average person in America spends about $1100/year on coffee and most people think of coffee before anything else in the am
  • Cell phone carrier – Verizon– Our phone and our cell phone bill is now a staple of life whether we like it or not
  • Movies & entertainment – Netflix– Netflix now has more U.S. subscribers than all of the cable TV providers combined and it all started with a mail-in DVD
  • Eating out – Darden Restaurants– So many choices but the Darden umbrella spans fast casual through fine dining at Capital Grille.
  • Saving & investing – Schwab– Formerly a do-it-yourself online trading firm and now an investment powerhouse across DIY, Advisory, and investment products
  • Live events & concerts – Live Nation– Millennial’s like the “experience” but everybody loves a good concert don’t they?
  • Entertainment, vacations, media – Disney– The mouse-house is rumored to be buying most of 21st Century Fox assets to compete with Netflix. The ultimate compliment for NFLX
  • Video gaming – Activision– I remember Asteroids on my tiny MAC, now we have video graphics that rival real life! E-sports is a huge business and early in its popularity
  • Personal care products – Johnson & Johnson– What would we all do without our Neutrogena, Band-Aids, and Listerine?
  • Spirits and wine – Constellation Brands– What a wonderful way to end the day right?
  • Apparel – Athleisure – Nike & Lululemon– Two very popular clothing brands serving a healthy world
  • Mobile payments & transition away from using cash – MasterCard– Visa & MasterCard are kind of interchangeable but MasterCard has the longer track record
  • Cable & broadband – Comcast– Like ’em or hate ’em most of us like our entertainment and the pipe into our house is muy importante
  • Tech hardware & entertainment – Apple– Our phones are now a staple of life. My daughter thinks I spend too much time on the phone, just wait until she has one, revenge is coming!
  • Home improvement, home construction – Home Depot– It feels like I’m at Home Depot every week for something and I kind of like the experience
  • Warehouse shopping – Costco– The original Prime membership, could there be a company with a bigger MOAT around it? People LOVE the experience & deals
  • Energy as a proxy for our gasoline expenditure – Chevron– As a F-150 owner, it never feels good to fill up that tank but how would I get to the trails for a ride?

Not a bad looking hind-sight portfolio indeed. Its diversified yet not too diversified.

50% Consumer Discretionary, 10% Consumer Staples, 15% Technology, 10% Healthcare, 5% Telecom,  5% Financials and 5% Energy

Data source: Riskalyze.com

Well, I guess we have yet another wonderful looking back-test but it does highlight the potential to hedge your spending on your favorite brands by investing in those stocks for the long-term. This hypo portfolio doubled the S&P 500 return with a lower risk score based on Riskalyze’s methodology. For more information, go to Riskalyze.com, its a wonderful portfolio analysis tool.

I wanted to end this inaugural blog post by lasering in on a few of these brands to drive home the point:

Amazon

My family loves Amazon for a variety of things and we spend a decent amount of money every year on the site & for our Prime membership.

Prime is $99/year so 10 years of memberships has cost us $990

Let’s say we spend $2000/year on products so 10 years of spending is $20,000

I won’t add a Whole Foods analysis because it’s a recent purchase of AMZN but suffice to say we spent tens of thousands of dollars shopping at Whole Foods over the last decade.

Let’s sum our likely spending up:  $990 + $20,000 = $20,990 in spending

WHAT WOULD MY GAIN LOOK LIKE IF I SPENT $25K ON AMAZON STOCK 10 YEARS AGO ENDING 11/1/17?

ABOUT A 10X GAIN VS THE S&P 500, I PAID FOR MY SPENDING HABITS IN GAINS AND LOTS AND LOTS OF MONEY LEFT OVER FOR RETIREMENT GOALS!

Source: Riskalyze

Starbucks

Are you one of those people that can’t start their day without your morning coffee?

The average person in America spends $1100/year on coffee – it’s probably higher if you count coffee at home.

That’s $11,000 spend over 10 years.

Let’s also assume you get a muffin or some other food so your spending on “other things at Starbucks” is also $1100/yr or $11,000 over 10 years

Let’s sum our likely spending up:  $11,000 + $11,000 = $22,000 in spending

WHAT WOULD MY GAIN LOOK LIKE IF I SPENT $25K ON STARBUCKS STOCK 10 YEARS AGO ENDING 11/1/17?

A MINISCULE 2.4X GAIN VS THE S&P 500, I PAID FOR MY SPENDING HABITS IN GAINS AND LOTS AND LOTS OF MONEY LEFT OVER FOR RETIREMENT GOALS!

BOTTOM LINE:

Obviously every brand would not have offered out-performance versus the S&P 500 but even the worst performer of the 20, Chevron offered a gain of roughly $21,600. That doesn’t include the further gains generated if those dividends were reinvested along the way.

But my Chevron gains would certainly take the edge off of my high gas spending over time. At the very least, the gains lower the average cost of gas which is always welcomed!

Let’s not forget about inflation too. Inflation is a silent tax most of the time. It does, however drain purchasing power. Our government does a wonderful job carving out the rising costs of everything we really need and tells us there’s no inflation but investing in stocks, particularly stocks with pricing power, strong moats around their business and those focused on an enormous and persistent theme of consumption, aka BRANDS can absolutely be a nice hedge against inflation over time. Something to ponder as you do your holiday shopping. Perhaps you should add some of your favorite Brands to the portfolio as a spending hedge?

Happy holidays from all of us at Accuvest Global Advisors.

Disclosures

Accuvest Global Advisors (“Accuvest”) is a registered investment adviser with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Accuvest and its affiliates do not provide tax advice. Accordingly, any discussion of U.S. tax matters contained herein (including any attachments) is not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, in connection with the promotion, marketing or recommendation by anyone unaffiliated with Accuvest of any of the matters addressed herein or for the purpose of avoiding U.S. tax-related penalties. The information provided by Accuvest (or any portion thereof) may not be copied or distributed without Accuvest’s prior written approval. All statements are current as of the date written and does not constitute an offer or solicitation to any person in any jurisdiction in which such offer or solicitation is not authorized or to any person to whom it would be unlawful to make such offer or solicitation. This information was produced by and the opinions expressed are those of Accuvest as of the date of writing and are subject to change. Any research is based on proprietary research and analysis of global markets and investing.

Hypothetical or Back-Tested Results

Any hypothetical or back-tested results were not actually achieved in a real account, nor can they be used as an expectation of future results, and are no guarantee losses will not occur in the future. No representation is being made that any account will or is likely to achieve profits of losses similar to these being shown. You should not assume investment decisions we will make in the future will be profitable or will equal the hypothetical investment performance of the past. The back test is limited in that it does not factor in costs such as brokerage commissions, taxes, slippage, spreads, and advisory fees. Back tested performance does not represent actual performance and should not be interpreted as an indication of such performance. Actual performance for client accounts may be materially lower than that of the portfolios. Back tested performance results have certain inherent limitations. Such results do not represent the impact that material economic and market factors might have on an investment adviser’s decision-making process if the adviser were actually managing client money. Back tested performance also differs from actual performance because it is achieved through the retroactive application of model portfolios designed with the benefit of hindsight. As a result, the models theoretically may be changed from time to time and the effect on performance results could be either favorable or unfavorable.

This article was written by Eric M. Clark, Portfolio Manager – Brands suite of investments at Accuvest, a participant in the ETF Strategist Channel.

Research/Outlook Disclosure

This information was produced by and the opinions expressed are those of Accuvest as of the date of writing and are subject to change. Any research is based on Accuvest proprietary research and analysis of global markets and investing. The information and/or analysis presented have been compiled or arrived at from sources believed to be reliable, however Accuvest does not make any representation as their accuracy or completeness and does not accept liability for any loss arising from the use hereof. Some internally generated information may be considered theoretical in nature and is subject to inherent limitations associated therein. Any sectors or allocations referenced may or may not be represented in portfolios of clients of Accuvest, and do not represent all of the securities purchased, sold or recommended for client accounts.

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