Inflation Affecting Your Portfolio? Here Are 3 Stocks That May Beat It

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Inflation is taking a bite out of your wallet. Your groceries are more expensive, and so are materials, labor, and freight for companies. Some companies can’t raise prices since consumers won’t pay them.

Instead, they must absorb the cost, and thus they are less profitable. In turn, lower profits usually mean lower stock prices.

However, some companies are doing well despite inflation and have pricing power. If you’re worried inflation might be affecting your stock portfolio, here are three stocks that may beat it.

Occidental Petroleum

Occidental Petroleum (OXY) is a large oil and natural gas exploration and production company operating around the world.

OXY has been in the news often in the past two years. The company bought Anadarko for $55 billion, including debt, in 2019. Next year, the COVID-19 pandemic decimated oil prices, and OXY struggled with high debt, losses, and dividend cuts.

However, Warren Buffett helped make the Anadarko deal work. According to Warren Buffett’s annual letter in 2021, he invested $10 billion in exchange for preferred shares and warrants for common stock. Preferred shares pay a coupon of 8%.

In addition, Buffett has been buying common stock and now owns about 20% of the company. It’s tough to argue against Buffett, and his moves are usually good ones to follow.

Two years after the pandemic, oil prices have recovered and are now $100+ per barrel, and the average gas price is roughly $4 per gallon in the US. Consumers and businesses have no choice but to pay the higher costs.

This reversal of fortune probably means OXY will have an excellent year, deleveraging and returning cash to shareholders. The company increased the quarterly dividend rate to $0.13 from $0.01 per share and is buying back $3 billion in shares.

The annual dividend rate is $0.52 per share, giving a forward dividend yield of 0.88%. The dividend is well covered by a payout ratio of ~7.2%.

The stock is still cheap, too, with a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of about 8.2X.

  • Ticker: OXY
  • Market Cap: $22.75 billion
  • Annual Dividend Rate (FWD): $0.52
  • Dividend Yield (FWD): 0.88%

Walmart

The second stock to beat inflation is Walmart (WMT). The company remains the largest retailer in the world, with around 10,500 stores operating under the Walmart and Sam’s Club brands. In addition, the company has a presence in the US, Canada, Mexico, China, and other countries through joint ventures. Their total revenue was about $572.75 billion in fiscal 2022.

Walmart is a beneficiary during a period of high inflation. When consumers can afford less with the same $1, they may cut back on eating at restaurants and buying electronics, but always need to buy staples and essentials.

Walmart is the low-price leader, and when prices are going up faster than income, Walmart and other discount retailers benefit as consumers trade down.

Walmart’s comparable sales are up during the pandemic, and in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2022, continued to increase. For example, comparable sales rose +5.6% in the US, +8.3% in Mexico, +19.8% in China, and +4.6% in Canada. Sam’s club is doing even better with +16.3% comparable sales growth in the quarter.

Walmart is a dividend growth stock and consistently raised the dividend for 48 years, making it a Dividend Aristocrat. The forward dividend rate is $2.24 per share, giving a dividend yield of about 1.43%. The payout ratio is a conservative 34%.

Walmart’s stock price is rising, but it still trades at a reasonable valuation of ~23.3X within the average for the past 5-years.

  • Ticker: WMT
  • Market Cap: $432.25 billion
  • Annual Dividend Rate (FWD): $6.75
  • Dividend Yield (FWD): 1.43%

Chubb

Chubb Limited (CB) is the world’s largest global insurance and reinsurance firm operating in 54 countries. The company offers property & casualty (P&C) insurance, agricultural insurance, life insurance, commercial and specialty insurance, and reinsurance.

Chubb is benefitting from a period of higher insurance prices. However, it is rising interest rates that will really help Chubb’s profits. High inflation has meant the US Federal Reserve is removing stimulus from the economy. The combination of tapering, interest rate increases, and reducing the Fed’s balance sheet puts upward pressure on interest rates.

Chubb owns fixed income assets on its balance sheet to back its insurance policies as required for an insurer. Rising interest rates mean these assets will generate more significant investment income.

In fact, net investment income was a record $3.7 billion in 2021. Moreover, it will probably be higher in 2022 if interest rates keep rising in response to high inflation.

Chubb is one of the longest dividend-paying stocks in the US, with more than 100 straight years of rewarding shareholders. Additionally, the firm is also a Dividend Aristocrat, having raised its dividend for 29 consecutive years. The annual dividend rate is $3.20 per share, and the forward dividend yield is 1.52%. The dividend safety is solid, with a payout ratio of approximately 25%.

Chubb is trading at a valuation multiple of about 14.25X, within its average in the past 10-years.

  • Ticker: CB
  • Market Cap: $89.18 billion
  • Annual Dividend Rate (FWD): $3.20
  • Dividend Yield (FWD): 1.52%

Final Thoughts on Stocks to Beat Inflation

Inflation generally means higher costs for companies. Inputs such as commodities, materials, supplies, labor, and freight are higher. Some companies cannot recoup these higher costs quickly, and consequently, margins and profitability decline. As a result, the stock price usually drops too.

However, when companies offer products with few alternatives, like oil and gasoline, or manage to be the low-price leader, they thrive as consumers trade down.

Insurance companies and banks do better as the fixed income assets they hold on their balance sheet generate more investment income.

Originally published at Wealth of Geeks

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