These are treacherous times for equity investors. The curse of Monday struck again today: the Dow crashed through the 10,000 mark. Stocks across the board are getting slaughtered. So where can you put your money right now? Julian Chillingworth, manager of the Rathbone Income and Growth Fund, recommends four defensive stocks in today’s MoneyWeek…
Container manufacturer Rexam (LSE:REX)
is a defensive play. Its share price rose about 20% after good interim
numbers. The business model is easy to grasp – Rexam makes plastic and
aluminium containers for a range of purposes, feeding into the relative
safety of the consumer staples sector. Its pricing policy means it is
also insulated from commodity price rises – the costs are shouldered by
the goods’ producers. The European business has continued to grow
strongly, as has South America, although the US is a little softer.
Rexam is well positioned in the fastest-growing countries thanks to its
expansionary capital spending programme. The shares yield 4.9%.
We have bought into Scottish & Southern Energy (LSE:SSE)
on a yield of 4.3%. The group has benefited from higher electricity
prices and the need to secure our future energy supply; it is involved
in alternatives such as wind power. The dividend has doubled since
2000, and investment opportunities will provide continued growth. We
also believe that future earnings are predictable, which is
particularly useful in the current environment.
Temporary-power provider Aggreko (LSE:AGK)
is still a favoured industrials stock. It now benefits from a greater
profile in China on the back of its work at the Beijing Olympics, and
interim figures beat City hopes. Compared to last year, its return on
capital employed (ROC) was up 28%, revenues were up 28%, trading profit
42%, and earnings per share (EPS) 45%. The interim dividend was also
raised by 25%. The business is driven mainly by strong operations in
emerging markets, which help to offset softer growth in the US and
Europe. Aggreko recently bought a small Canadian operator, which will
give it access to the $10bn oil-sands market. We agree with management
that the imbalance between supply and demand will continue to push the
business forward. We have recently taken profits but remain buyers on
weakness.
HSBC (LSE:HSBA)
is our preferred play in a volatile sector. It looks overvalued now,
but it is well capitalised and diversified, and has so far refused to
bow to its ‘white knight’ status, having passed on HBoS and cancelled a
deal to buy Korea Exchange Bank. HSBC is now the world’s largest bank
by market capitalisation at $180bn; its exposure to emerging markets is
reassuring, and we believe the bank will easily maintain its credit
ratios relative to peers, and keep paying cash dividends. Buy on
weakness.
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