My 3 Favorite Stocks to Buy Right Now
Many of my friends like to ask me what my favorite stocks are. Ideally, my portfolio should contain a healthy mix of growth stocks and dividend stocks. This is because I want to structure the portfolio in a way that gives me passive income while helping me to compound my wealth over the long term. Call it the best of both worlds if you will, but I believe that having such a mix helps me to achieve diversification while also providing sufficient exposure to both growth and income stocks.
You can do the same for your portfolio, too, if you seek a mix of growth and income. Dividend stocks should include businesses that generate consistent free cash flow and have a long history of paying out dividends. Growth stocks, on the other hand, need to possess sustainable catalysts that can ensure the business can grow its revenue and net income for the long term.
Here are three favorite stocks that you can consider buying for your investment portfolio.
Lennox International (NYSE: LII) is a market leader in energy-efficient, climate-control solutions. Some of its products include heat pumps, furnaces, air conditioners, chillers, and indoor air-quality systems. The company has demonstrated steady growth in its top and bottom lines over the past three years.
Revenue grew from $4.2 billion in 2021 to $5 billion in 2023 with net income climbing from $464 million to $590.1 million over the same period. The business also generated an average-annual free cash flow of $365 million, showcasing Lennox’s ability to generate dependable free cash flow that can be used to pay out dividends.
The climate-control specialist has dutifully paid out quarterly dividends since 2000 and most recently increased its quarterly dividend by 4.5% year over year to $1.15 per share back in May.
The company has continued its strong financial streak in the first half of 2024. Sales inched up just 1.5% year over year to $2.5 billion, but operating income climbed 16.4% to $486.9 million. Lennox’s net income stood at $370.2 million, 17.4% higher than the net income of $315.2 million a year ago. Free cash flow came in at $99 million for the first half of this year, more than triple of what was generated in the previous-corresponding period.
Lennox also reaffirmed its full-year revenue guidance of 7% year-over-year growth and revised its earnings-per-share (EPS) guidance upwards. The company now expects EPS to come in between $19.50 to $20.25, up from the previous range of $19 to $20.
Management has updated its set of long-term targets for 2026 with an increase in targeted revenue to a range of $5.4 billion to $6 billion, up from between $5 billion to $5.5 billion previously. The company also expects to convert around 90% of its net income to free cash flow, thus continuing its track record of healthy free-cash-flow generation.
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