For example, consider the $7.1 billion bid that China's largest meat processor made last week for America's largest hog farmer and pork producer. Shuanghui International Holding is looking to buy Smithfield Foods (NYSE: SFD [1]) to increase meat imports to China, where domestic production can't keep pace with fast-rising demand.#-ad_banner-#
The consumer is at the centerpiece of the emerging market growth story, which is creating expansion opportunities for consumer goods companies such as Smithfield and supporting earnings and dividend gains for income investors. In the past five years, the consumer-oriented sectors of the MSCI Emerging Market index have significantly outperformed the broader index, which in turn has greatly outperformed the S&P 500. From a pre-recession peak in 2008, consumer staples is up 82%, health care is up 66% and consumer discretionary is up 32%.
Investors eager to profit from the appetite for consumer goods in emerging markets could invest directly in stocks based in the so-called BRIC nations (Brazil, Russia, India and China), but this may not be an optimal strategy. For instance, well-publicized accounting frauds hint at the riskiness of China's stock market. Even the markets that are considered relatively safe, such as India and Brazil, can't compare with the U.S. stock market in terms of transparency and the timeliness of disclosure.
A better option for most investors -- and one that's closer to home -- is owning shares of U.S. companies with large overseas operations. These blue-chip companies have multinational operations, great exposure to emerging markets, reliable profit growth and hefty dividends for income investors.
General Electric (NYSE: GE) Yield: 3.2% |
Growth in China helped GE post 12% growth in earnings per share (EPS) from continuing operations last year to $1.39.Analysts are looking for EPS growth of 11% in each of the next five years. Even more impressive, the company's cash flowimproved 48% last year, to $17.8 billion, which should provide plenty of fuel for dividend growth. GE cut its dividend in 2010 but has since raised it five times, including a 12% hike in December. |
Kimberly-Clark (NYSE: KMB) Yield: 3.3% |
Philip Morris International (NYSE: PM) Yield: 3.7% |
EPS rose 12% last year, to $5.45, and Philip Morris has met or exceeded its 10%-plus EPS growth target every year since the spin-off. The company's operating margin is strong at 44%, well above the 37% average of its industry peers. Philip Morris raised its dividend by 11% in September and generates enough cash flow to cover the dividend twice over, so future increases appear likely. With 10-year Treasury yields still hovering near 2%, the company's 3.7% yield becomes even more appealing. |
Action to Take --> My top pick overall is GE. Phillip Morris is a good choice for investors seeking higher yields, and Kimberly-Clark is a standout for dividend safety.
By Lisa Springer
Published 06/13/2013 - 10:00
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