Yesterday's post made me think about how the same principle holds true for many of the companies that are high, dependable dividend payers, which is the kind I'm interested in, since I don't want to put my money in fixed investments that are eroded by inflation.
Many of the good dividend payers are companies that sell low-cost consumables -- especially snack food. Hershey, Wrigley, McDonalds and so on. Or Philip Morris (now Altria) which sell cigarettes, which is the ultimate bad health type of consumer stock. When I buy those companies am I responsible for the poor health of the people who eat too many of their products? I don't think so -- even of tobacco companies, as politically incorrect as it is to say so. I've never been a smoker, don't want to be a smoker, hate tobacco smoke, don't like to be around it, and I'm glad for reasonable restrictions on it inside public buildings -- though I've come to hate the fascist reminders in airports about not smoking.
Yet nobody forces anybody to go to McDonalds, eat a chocolate bar or even to smoke a cigarette. When I was a teenager I chose not to smoke, and I've kept up that choice through my adult years. And the information about the health problems associated with smoking have only increased since I was a teenager. So anybody who's a smoking teenager or young adult now is smoking despite 100 times more knowledge of its negative health effects than I had.
So why not buy the stocks of these companies and collect the dividends?
consumer investing
consumer investing
Monday, April 16, 2007
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