How to Make a Fortune From Doomed and Dying Companies
How to make a fortune from doomed and dying companies... A safe and simple strategy you've never considered... How you could have nearly doubled your money without touching stocks... 'Take this ONE step... and then never buy another newsletter again'...
Regular readers know all about 'picking up nickels in front of a steamroller'...
This old Wall Street adage simply refers to trying to earn small returns while taking on the risk of large catastrophic losses. The strategy works as long as you don't slip.
But you'll never get rich doing this... And eventually, you'll get crushed.
In recent years, my colleague Dan Ferris used this saying to describe the dangers of the "short volatility" trade. This seemingly "no lose" proposition ended in a colossal bust.
In today's Digest, I (Mike DiBiase) will share a strategy that is the complete opposite... It's like picking up $100 bills in front of a steamroller a block away. And as you'll see, with this strategy, you could potentially earn significant returns while taking on far less risk...
Most investors want to stay as far away as possible from dying companies...
The idea of investing in companies spiraling toward bankruptcy scares them. Investing your hard-earned money in businesses headed to zero seems like a sure-fire way to get wiped out.
That's understandable. But the thing is, fears of pending doom can sometimes create opportunities for savvy investors to make huge returns before these companies go bankrupt.
To be clear, this isn't a strategy where you profit as a company's share price falls – like shorting the stock or buying put options. With those strategies, it's critical to get the timing right. And they expose you to large losses if the stock suddenly rises.
With the strategy I'll share today, you're making an actual investment in a company...
You aren't taking on any additional risk if the stock's price rises. In fact, a rising stock price only reduces your risk.
And no... I'm not talking about investing in "penny stocks" with the hope that they'll double from $0.30 per share to $0.60 per share. Investing in penny stocks is nothing more than gambling... These stocks could just as easily go all the way to zero.
In fact, you might have realized by now that this strategy doesn't have anything to do with investing in stocks at all...
I'm talking about investing in a company's debt...
More specifically, I'm talking about buying corporate bonds issued by companies headed for bankruptcy.
To be clear, you don't want to touch these companies' stocks. Their best days are long behind them. While you could make some money if investors react favorably to any glimmer of good news, sending the stock higher for a brief period of time, it's generally a losing move.
It's not a matter of if, but when, these companies will go belly-up.
But here's the important thing to remember...
Just because a company is headed for bankruptcy doesn't necessarily mean its bonds aren't safe. You can earn massive, safe returns when you invest in the debt of dying companies.
This is because bond investing is a lot different from stock investing...
Most investors have never thought about investing in corporate bonds. They believe stocks are the only way to invest in companies. That's what Wall Street wants you to think...
They save their best investments for their wealthiest clients. Have you ever had a stockbroker try to sell you a corporate bond? I doubt it. They make massive profits on the commissions from investors buying and selling stocks.
But bonds are actually much safer and easier to understand. And unlike stocks, when investing in bonds, you don't have to love a company or think it has a rosy future. You don't need to come up with estimates of what you think the company is worth. All you need to understand is whether you'll get paid what you are contractually owed.
Unlike equity, bonds are legal obligations for the company to pay you... You'll receive interest payments (called "coupons") every six months. And you'll get paid $1,000 in principal (called the bond's "par value") when the bond matures at some point in the future.
If the company doesn't pay all of the interest and principal as it comes due, it'll go bankrupt. As we like to say, bonds are binary... you either get paid in full or the company goes bust. They are the only two possibilities with bonds. And unlike stockholders, even in bankruptcies, bondholders usually end up recovering at least part of their investments.
That's why investing in bonds is far safer than investing in stocks. And it's why I urge you to consider investing in bonds today if you haven't done it before.
Our monthly newsletter Stansberry's Credit Opportunities is devoted to finding the best opportunities in corporate bonds. My colleague Bill McGilton and I spend a lot of time studying and writing about debt. Bill is a former corporate lawyer who analyzes all of the important bond documents. We recommend safe bonds – bonds that we research thoroughly and determine will pay us in full and on time – that deliver equity-like returns.
But why, you might wonder, would we ever suggest you invest in the debt of a company headed for bankruptcy? The answer is simple...
Companies headed for bankruptcy are great places to find the best bond opportunities...
Here's why...
Most investors do a poor job of evaluating heavily indebted companies. Their sentiment about the companies tends to go from one extreme to another...
They either assume a company is completely safe and pile into its stock and bonds. Or they assume it's completely toxic and sell anything associated with the company.
And this overall sentiment can flip from one extreme to another quickly... When investors turn on a company, they turn fast and hard. This "love 'em or hate 'em" mentality creates wild swings in both its stock and bond prices. And that creates mispricings...
Some of the bonds issued by these troubled companies can trade for far less than the $1,000 par value. They might trade for $500, for example. But remember, bondholders are still entitled to collect $1,000 at maturity – plus all of the interest payments along the way.
The only thing that matters in bond investing is whether the bond you are buying is safe to own...
You can be extremely pessimistic about the company that issued the bond, but comfortable owning one of its bonds. If the company that issued the bond goes out of business a few years after you've been paid, who cares? Your money will be elsewhere by that point.
Now, I need to be clear: You don't want to buy just any bond of a company headed for bankruptcy. Not every bond is safe. But the opposite is true also... Not every bond is toxic.
You need to understand a company's debt schedule and borrowing capacity to figure out which ones are safe. And some bonds become far too cheap for the level of risk.
That's because most companies don't go bankrupt overnight. They die slow, painful deaths...
These bankruptcies often take much longer than investors expect.
New management is often brought in to run the troubled company. This new leadership implements its "turnaround" plan, trying to resuscitate the dying business. It cuts costs, sells off old assets and product lines, and invests in new technologies and businesses.
These folks have a lot invested in the stock, so they do everything they can to bring the company back to life. No one wants to see a company go bankrupt under his watch.
The new management "sells" its strategy to new investors. The company's stock price often temporarily recovers. And as long as the business is still remotely profitable, banks and other creditors freely lend their capital to fund management's new strategies.
It can take years before investors realize the turnaround isn't working. Meanwhile, the dying company continues to make its interest payments and meet its debt obligations.
And that's how savvy investors can earn huge returns. Let me give you an example...
You could have nearly doubled your money investing in a bond issued by now-bankrupt retailer Bon-Ton Stores...
The department-store chain filed for bankruptcy on February 4, 2018. The bankruptcy surprised no one. What surprised nearly everyone was how long it took to happen...
In 2011 – seven years earlier – everyone knew Bon-Ton would go bankrupt. The "retail apocalypse" was sweeping the country. Tens of thousands of brick-and-mortar stores started closing. Bon-Ton's sales had already fallen 15% from a few years earlier, and the company was no longer profitable.
Investors priced Bon-Ton's stock for bankruptcy. The company's market cap dropped to less than $50 million, and it was sitting on a pile of debt that totaled nearly $1 billion.
Bond investors gave up, too... In January 2012, you could have bought Bon-Ton's only outstanding bond for around $540 – a substantial discount to par value ($1,000).
But if you did your homework, you would have known this bond was safe to own...
Smart investors knew it was too early for Bon-Ton to go bankrupt. Although the company was posting accounting losses, it was still generating around $100 million in annual "cash profits" – the cash it generated from its business.
The company could easily afford its interest payments. And it owed only a small amount of debt before the bond came due a few years later. On top of that, Bon-Ton's banks were willing to lend it another $450 million on its revolving credit facility.
Investors who bought the bond in January 2012 stood to earn nearly 50% on their investment if Bon-Ton survived another two years and paid off the bond. As it turns out, folks who bought Bon-Ton's bond didn't have to wait that long...
Just a few months later, Bon-Ton issued a new $330 million bond maturing in five years. The cash infusion temporarily restored investors' confidence in the company. By the end of 2012, the bond investors bought for around $540 traded for more than its $1,000 par value.
Investors who sold the bond when it returned above par earned a 92% return in less than a year.
The following year, Bon-Ton paid off the bond early – and in full.
As I've explained, the stigma of impending bankruptcies can often create opportunities like this...
And in the June issue of Stansberry's Credit Opportunities, Bill and I just recommended a bond with a similar setup. But it's even safer than the Bon-Ton bond I just mentioned. It matures next June and was yielding 30% at the time of our recommendation.
It was issued by a retailer that's almost certain to meet the same fate as Bon-Ton. But we don't believe it'll go bankrupt for at least another three years.
The company still generates a ton of cash... It can easily afford its interest payments and has little debt maturing over the next few years. The company will likely be able to pay off the bond with just the cash it generates from its business.
And even if it can't, the company has room to borrow on its credit line that would pay off the bond and other debt maturing over the next year several times over.
One last thing...
If you're like most folks who are new to the bond market, you're probably still skeptical. You probably figure there has to be a "catch" of some sort... that investing in bonds can't really be this easy, safe, and profitable.
Well, you don't just have to take my word for it...
You see, recently one of our own paid-up subscribers contacted us with an unusual request: He wanted to go on camera to share his personal experience with our corporate bond recommendations. And I guarantee you don't want to miss what he had to say. See for yourself right here.
New 52-week highs (as of 7/3/19): American Express (AXP), Axis Capital (AXS), Blackstone (BX), CBRE Group (CBRE), Dollar General (DG), Disney (DIS), Western Asset Emerging Markets Debt Fund (EMD), Fidelity Select Medical Technology and Devices Portfolio (FSMEX), General Mills (GIS), Coca-Cola (KO), Lockheed Martin (LMT), iShares iBoxx Investment Grade Corporate Bond Fund (LQD), McDonald's (MCD), Motorola Solutions (MSI), Nestlé (NSRGY), Invesco High Yield Equity Dividend Achievers Fund (PEY), Procter & Gamble (PG), Polymetal (LSE: POLY), Royal Gold (RGLD), ResMed (RMD), Starbucks (SBUX), Service Corporation International (SCI), Sprott (TSX: SII), ProShares Ultra S&P 500 Fund (SSO), Stryker (SYK), Travelers (TRV), ProShares Ultra Financials Fund (UYG), Vanguard S&P 500 Fund (VOO), and W.R. Berkley (WRB).
A busy day in the mailbag: Praise for Porter... kudos for Doc's Advanced Options strategies... and a concern about cannabis stocks. What's on your mind? Let us know at feedback@stansberryresearch.com.
"Porter has been my favorite, amongst many stellar colleagues, since I started with Stansberry. He has that extra something which I saw on masterful and thoroughly prolific display [Tuesday] in his debate with Whitney Tilson in Tilson's Empire Financial Daily.
"He proved to be far more than an expert stock advisor, showcasing his great historical depth and breadth of knowledge and true critical thinking when it comes to reeling all that in and homing in on the immediate and future. He knows the macro effect on the micro, and can spot narrow, shallow bs from an eagle's vantage point.
"He also has the very rare quality that puts him in the pantheon of real thinkers – he knows what he doesn't know, and thus knows what not to blindly, 'fashionably' and politely swallow. He actually embodies the essence of what makes true capitalism organically work – his first priority is to never sacrifice his own well-being – his integrity – which, in turn, benefits the rest of society (or those with an open-mind to listen). The greatest of minds throughout history have been known as much by their detractors, as by their adulators – and the courage not to be swayed too much by either." – Paid-up subscriber Gary S.
"Doc, unfortunately, I cannot afford to buy into the Advanced Options program. My total portfolio is just too small and my income too limited.
"However, I always sign up for the online seminars and learned much from your seminar on Advanced Options. Using your recommendation on BX, of which I already hold a position, I used your examples of a bull call option and did this:
"On June 20th bought one Aug 2, 19 $44.50 and sold one Aug 2, 19 46.50 calls for $97. Then on July 2nd sold one Aug 2, 19 $44.50 and bought one Aug 2, 19 $46.50 for $134. This appears to be a 27.6% gain in 20 days, and annualizes to 503.7%.
"This was just a 'toe in the water' trade and I hope to be able to do more in the future. Thanks, Doc!" – Paid-up subscriber David W.
"With [shares of Canopy Growth (CGC)] imploding, what is the future of the Acreage Holding (ACRGF) deal?" – Paid-up subscriber John Q.
Brill comment: John, while our colleague Thomas Carroll has discussed this deal with his Cannabis Capitalist subscribers, we'll remind you that he has not recommended buying shares of either of these companies to date. However, your question does raise an important point...
By our count, CGC shares have fallen a little more than 20% since the end of April. But they're still up roughly 50% so far this year. That's hardly "imploding."
Fact is, the cannabis market is still incredibly volatile today. Even the best and biggest companies have routinely seen their share prices plunge by 40%-50% or more during normal market corrections.
If you're going to investing in cannabis stocks, you must be prepared to weather similar declines.
Regards,
Mike DiBiase
Atlanta, Georgia
July 5, 2019
