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Mexico's Best Income Stock |
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-- By
Anthony Haddad |
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This NYSE-listed ADR has been given a legal monopoly
until 2048. The control of this lucrative market puts the company in
prime position to pay fat dividends for decades to come.
(Full
Story Below) |
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Also in Today's
Issue... |
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With Our Stock of the Month Portfolio |
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The
Four Major Threats to Retirement!
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The ability to accumulate
a nice, healthy nest egg can make or break retirement
dreams. A series of looming threats are getting brushed
aside -- they will most certainly affect us all -- and
in many ways they're being made worse by all of our
country's other problems.
Click here to learn how to protect and grow a nest egg. |
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Mexico's Best Income Stock
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Most people think competition is good, and it
usually is -- for consumers.
For established companies, however, the story is different.
Companies who must face competition -- which is very nearly
all of them -- must constantly worry about; the quality of
its goods or services, changes in consumer preferences, price, and a host of other factors.
Companies that have the rare benefit of being the only
participant in their market, on the other hand, can just sit
back and collect the cash. These companies are still aware
of quality, price and consumer feedback, of course, but in
the absence of any competitive threat the impetus to respond
to those forces is far less pressing. The money rolls in
regardless.
Investors can profit today from several companies that do
just that.
One that stands out:
Grupo Aeroportuario del Sureste
(NYSE: ASR).
This company, whose translates to "Airport Group of the
Southeast," operates nine airports in southeastern Mexico.
With no competition in the region, the company has a legal
monopoly on air traffic. Its business model is simple but
elegant: A plane lands at one of its airports, it gets paid.
Investors need not fear any antitrust issues. The Mexican
government is perfectly happy with the situation. In fact,
Grupo Aeroportuario del Sureste is licensed by the Mexican
government to operate its airports under a 50-year contract
that runs from 1998 through 2048. For those of you keeping
score at home, that leaves us with at least 39 more years of
dividend payments.
ASR pays dividends once a year. The most recent payment, in
May, was $4.6936, which gives the shares a first-class 10.5%
yield at today's prices. The payment has grown +737.7%
during the past five years, or about +53.0% if annually compounded.
Grupo Aeroportuario del Sureste not only makes money by
charging fees to airlines, it also charges passengers for
using its facilities. The more traffic that goes through its
airports, the more money it makes. These fees account for
about three-quarters of the company's income. The rest comes
from rent paid by retailers and parking-lot operators.
During the past three calendar years -- through 2008 --
revenue has increased +41.5%. For the first nine months of
2009, the company's top line has amounted to -1% less than
the comparable year-ago period. On the bottom line, net
earnings nearly doubled from 2006 to 2008. So far this year,
the company has earned a net profit equal to about 75% of
what it made in the same period of 2008.
Several risk factors -- natural disasters, government
policies -- can affect results. International travelers make
up about half of the company's passenger traffic, and a
hurricane can severely dampen tourist travel, as Hurricane
Wilma did in 2005.
This year's disaster was not a storm but swine flu. The
subsequent government action took a toll on results. In June,
safety concerns led the Mexican government to suspend
air-traffic operations at one of the company's airports,
which represented 5% of the company's passenger traffic. The
government gave 60 days for the problem to be corrected,
which dampened revenue.
Despite this, the company should benefit from
steady, long-term growth in air traffic. The company is
implementing a plan to upgrade its airports to handle more
international traffic in the years ahead. The company has
been busy investing in airport upgrades, including a new
third terminal and a second runway at its Cancun facility,
which was recently completed.
Grupo Aeroportuario del Sureste is perfectly positioned for
stable cash flow and dividend payouts. With no debt, $3.09
in cash per share and no competition, the company should
continue generating solid returns. Its 10.5% yield is a
perfect way for investors to invest in a monopoly of their
own.
-- Anthony Haddad
Staff Writer
StreetAuthority
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Worth Noting
Hewlett-Packard Co. (NYSE: HPQ),
the world's biggest personal-computer maker, will buy 3Com Corp.
for $2.7 billion to challenge Cisco Systems Inc. in the
computer- networking market.
Hewlett-Packard will pay $7.90 a share in cash for 3Com, 39
percent more than 3Com's closing price today.
-- Bloomberg
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Investor Trivia
To say emerging markets are on
fire is an understatement. Which of these countries rules the
leaderboard, posting amazing year-to-date returns of +114%?
A.)
Andorra
B.)
Brazil
C.)
Indonesia
D.)
Peru
E.)
Ethiopia |
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Breaking News
This
World Leader Looks Like a Great Short-Term Trade
This week's
Trade of
the Week comes from the pharmaceutical sector. This company is
one of the world's leading providers of health care products. Its
strong drug portfolio and diverse revenue stream could lead to big
profits -- and even bigger yields for investors.
Read
On...
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These
Growth-Oriented Companies Make a Product Consumers Can't Live
Without
A game-changing product
is making a few companies -- and their shareholders -- a lot of
money. A key acquisition points to the industry's standout.
Read
On...
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The
High-Yield Powerhouse Sector
These companies boast
yields of more than 6% and they raise distributions year after year.
With highly stable businesses, inelastic demand and natural barriers
to entry, they should continue to pay big dividends for years to
come.
Read
On...
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