Play defense: add utilities to your portfolio
Since the bull market began in 2009, shares in utilities — water, gas and power providers — have lagged Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index.
But recent rockiness in the stock market bodes well for the traditionally defensive utilities sector. From the S&P 500’s peak in late September to mid-December, the index surrendered 13.1 percent, including dividends. But shares in utilities firms returned 3.3 percent over the period.
As slow-growing, steady dividend payers, utilities are quintessential safe-haven stocks, which explains why they were overlooked for much of the stock market’s historic rise.
Rising interest rates didn’t help. Utilities must compete for investor attention with climbing market yields. Often called bond proxies, utility shares can struggle when rates are rising.
Interest is growing
But sentiment might be turning in favor of utilities. As the bull market moves into bear territory, investors are becoming more interested in defensive sectors.
Historically, utilities have bested the broad market during bear runs. During the 2007-09 downturn, for instance, utilities stocks lost 45.5 percent, or 9.75 percentage points fewer than the S&P 500 lost.
Fidelity Select Utilities (FSUTX) aims to beat its benchmark utilities index by focusing on faster-growing firms trading at reasonable prices. Manager Douglas Simmons favors firms that consistently raise their dividends, by at least 6 percent per year, over those that shell out the biggest payouts.
He sees opportunities in companies at the forefront of renewable energy, which he said are poised to boost earnings and dividends at a faster rate than the rest of the sector. One such firm, NextEra, is the top holding in the fund’s 30-stock portfolio. The fund yields 1.56 percent.
American Century Utilities (BULIX) isn’t a pure utilities fund. The managers start with the Russell 3000 Utilities index, which tracks 85 stocks, including a big slug — 30 percent of the bogey — in steady, high-yielding communications-services companies.
They whittle the index down to a 35-stock, actively managed portfolio, favoring bargain-priced stocks with rising share prices and high dividend yields. Though utilities firms make up most of the portfolio, communications giants AT&T and Verizon represent 25 percent of assets.
© 2019 The Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.