Well, I finally sat down and did some quick research on what companies I may be interested in. I tried to first come up with four different categories and companies within those categories that I use or like. I ended up blending some of them simply because I had no clue how they were officially listed. I chose petroleum/energy, utility, retail, and food. The retail and food ones got blended as you'll see. I haven't spent any money yet because I haven't opened the accounts etc. So these are just my choices of who I intend to invest in unless I can be convinced otherwise. I'm more than open to having my choices critiqued.
Petroleum- Chevron. High dividend and good growth over the last ten years. My first choice in gas for my vehicles is Chevron and Marathon. Marathon isn't doing so well stock wise though. I considered Exxon but their growth and dividend were less than Chevron.
Utility- Southern Company. Good dividend and good steady growth over the last ten years. They own Georgia Power and I'm biased towards all things Georgia. I considered Black Hills Energy(my current provider) and Con Ed based on Greg's recommendation. Southern Company has a slightly smaller dividend than Con Ed but more steady growth and again I'm biased so I like Southern Company.
Retail/Food- I'm in a tie right now between Walmart, Whole Foods, and CostCo. Walmart's dividend is nearly 100% higher than Whole Foods but their growth is flat. I'm aware they are trying to get into just the grocery store market and I think they will do well there. However, Whole Foods has tremendous growth over the last ten years. I also really like them even though I do not shop there. I do not foresee their popularity waning any time soon. If anything, I believe more people are going to shop there and the entire healthy/fresher food area of the market is going to grow. I also really like how they treat their employees. CostCo is another choice that has good dividend, good growth, and treats their employees in an excellent manner. So I'm really kind of torn between these three and am unsure which would be a better/wiser choice.
I looked into the soft drink segment as well because no matter how much health people declare soft drinks to be terrible for us, I doubt they will ever slow down sales enough to hurt. So again, my Georgia and Southern bias has stepped in an I'm looking at the Coca Cola Company(not Coke Bottling Company) and Dr Pepper. You can't get any more Southern than those two unless RC Cola can be found somewhere near you. It's basically a tie between the two with Coca Cola having a higher dividend and more history. So I think I'll lean towards Coca Cola. The only negative I see against it is that is costs a lot more than Dr Pepper. Does that really matter though? The dividends are paid out based on dollar amount not shares so unless the stock splits, cost shouldn't matter, correct?
For food, I wanted either Subway or Chic-fil-a but both are private so I looked at McDonal's and YUM Brands(Taco Bell etc). I'm going with McDonald's. Very high dividend, great growth, Greg's endorsement
haha, and just like with soft drinks, people aren't going to stop slowing down their consumption of that stuff any time soon I feel.
So, how do those look to people in the know? Any suggestions or critiques are welcome like I said. I'm trying to learn and get involved but at the same time keep it simple.
I think I should also point out that I do own Halliburton stock. I work there and have money in the ESPP. I'm not including them though simply because I'm putting my money into them regardless since it's through the ESPP which is discounted. However, because I do own them I am not considering any of my competitors though there are some good choices in that segment. Schlumberger, Baker Hughes, and Weatherford to name the biggest ones. For those that don't know, we are service companies within the petroleum market. We are not petroleum companies. We are contracted with the petroleum companies like Chevron, Shell, etc. So I guess you could call it a subcategory of the petroleum market.
Thanks