Would You Buy And Forget Barclays PLC, Tesco PLC Or Unilever plc?

Updated
Image: Unilever plc. Fair Use.
Image: Unilever plc. Fair Use.

Imagine that the stock market closed for five years and you could only buy one share to hold through that period. Would you be most comfortable with Barclays(LSE: BARC), Tesco(LSE: TSCO) or Unilever(LSE: ULVR)?

///>

Whatever decision you make, maybe that's how you should invest all the time. Unless we're prepared to hold shares for the long-term, maybe we shouldn't be holding them at all. I think this test is a good way to tease out the strength of conviction (or lack of it) that we really feel for the businesses underlying our shareholdings.

Big banks, big challenges

Barclays is the first firm I would rule out. Big banks face big challenges and I'm not prepared to risk holding them for five years without looking. The top risk arises from Barclays' cyclicality. Banks' profits rise and fall in line with unpredictable macro-economic cycles. That means shares in the sector are shooting up, plunging down, or marking time as the market compresses valuations in a vain attempt to iron out the effects of the cyclicality inherent in the sector.

The result of holding a bank like Barclays for a long time can be lacklustre total investment returns at best, but if we get the timing wrong, there's danger of making a losing investment in the banks. On top of that, the entire sector faces a gathering disruptive challenge from financial technology-driven competitors and from up-and-coming challenger banks cherry-picking the juiciest parts of the industry. Then there are the regulatory headwinds blowing so hard and the apparent will of governments to cut down the big banks' size so they can't threaten the stability of the world's financial system. All those things add up to a powerful reason to avoid the big London-listed banks.

A sector threatened

Supermarket chain Tesco doesn't make the cut either. For years supermarkets such as Tesco had it good due to the fast-and-loose spending habits of the public, but last decade's financial crisis put a stop to all that. Cash-strapped shoppers now try to make every penny count and that environment proved fertile for disruptive challenger operations Aldi and Lidl.

Together, Aldi and Lidl attract around 10.4% of the nation's grocery spend and rising fast. I think that's a real and growing threat to the traditional supermarkets capable of keeping them in retreat for years. I don't believe in the long-term recovery potential of Tesco. The firm has a bloated store estate that could prove to be a liability as the company tries to manage its own contraction.

Tesco and the other big supermarket chains built their dominant positions when conditions were different and now many of their operating and sales methods don't work as well. They'll try to adapt, but selling groceries has always been a low-margin high-volume business with little to differentiate one operator from another -- not the best of set-ups to base a recovery investment on.

Grinding it out

The company I would buy and forget for five years is Unilever. The firm's brands in the fast-moving consumer goods space deliver lots of reliable cash flow as customers re-buy repeatedly. Come recession or boom, people need their essential cleaning, personal care and food products and my guess is that Unilever will keep grinding out and steadily expanding its offering for years to come.

I'm confident that Unilever will deliver a positive outcome on total returns over five years and The Motley Fool analysts agree, which is why Unilever is one of five firms singled out in this free document of investing research.

I recommend that you apply the five-year buy-and-forget test to the other four companies featured in this report. Focusing on high-quality businesses with an investment time horizon measured in years can produce market-beating returns. You can judge the strength of these stock market opportunities for yourself by downloading this free report right now.

Click the link that follows and you'll get instant access to The Motley Fool's research on these five quality firms, free and without any obligation. To find out more, click here.

Kevin Godbold has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK owns shares of and has recommended Unilever. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Barclays. We Fools don't all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

Advertisement