When the economy seems shaky, many investors instinctively look for safer ground. Financial experts often point to “quality stocks” as a way to stay invested without taking on unnecessary risk — but what defines quality?
A recent Fidelity post listed a number of quality stocks worth investing in. While seven of them are an especially good place to start, financial experts explained generally what to look for in a stock, and why investing isn’t always as straightforward as it sounds.
First, we’ll cover the picks and then we’ll get into what makes a quality stock and what you should consider. The following are picks Fidelity found to be quality options:
Costco Wholesale (COST): The wholesale retailer has great prices, solid customer trust and low market volatility.
Verisk Analytics (VRSK): This risk-assessment software in the insurance industry has high revenue and low volatility.
Amazon (AMZN): Amazon’s Prime and Prime Video subscription services plus its Amazon Web Services division keep it a strong competitor in the market.
Alphabet (GOOGL) and Meta (META): The tech giants behind Google and Facebook/Instagram respectively, have long held their own. Both tech giants maintain their values by what Fidelity calls “self-sustaining, self-reinforcing flywheels.” This means they have big networks, wide reach and billions of customers frequently utilizing their services.
Netflix (NFLX) and Roblox (RBLX): The entertainment streamer and the video game platform are also businesses that do well because of wide subscriber bases and ongoing usage.
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When markets get shaky, investors often hear advice to “stick with quality,” but that term can mean very different things depending on who you ask, and it’s not always about brand recognition.
“Quality is a vague metric but typically includes any fundamental factor that isn’t defined as value or growth,” said Asher Rogovy, the chief investment officer of Magnifina, an SEC registered investment advisor firm. He also includes “many traits that can’t be quantified” in the definition of quality. “For example, I look for a management team with an even temperament.”
Adem Selita, co-founder of The Debt Relief Company, suggested quality stocks mean “something that is relatively solid in its demand and has consistency,” he said. “That consistency can be consistent dividend and dividend growth, consistent EPS performance, consistent cash flow, etc.”