The 3 Best Buffett Stocks for Retirees

Arguably, no one has done better with buy-and-hold investing than Warren Buffett. In a span of more than six decades, the Oracle of Omaha has transformed less than $10,000 into a fortune of more than $80 billion. But the best part about Buffett's strategy, which involves buying high-quality companies and hanging onto them for the long run, is that it can work for you, too.

Buffett's investing style can be particularly helpful to retirees, who are often looking to invest in stocks that provide income and stability. So what are the best Buffett stocks that a retiree can consider buying today? We posed this question to three of our investors, and they chose Visa (NYSE: V), Bank of New York Mellon (NYSE: BK), and Kraft Heinz Company (NASDAQ: KHC).

Warren Buffett speaking with reporters.
Warren Buffett speaking with reporters.

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This company keeps charging higher

Sean Williams (Visa): Even though payment processing facilitator Visa has a yield that some retirees might frown upon (0.6%), Warren Buffett's love for this payment giant makes a lot of sense.

Perhaps the best selling point of Visa is that its business model works in just about any economic environment. Visa isn't a lender like some of its peers, meaning that while it can't double-dip and make money from both transaction fees and interest in good economic times, it's also fully protected from delinquencies during economic contractions and recessions. Operating in more than 200 countries worldwide, Visa is able to take advantage of high growth in emerging markets, while also furthering entrenching itself in the developed countries that form its foundation.

Within the U.S., Visa is undeniably king. As of 2016, Visa's market share of the credit card market was 50.6%, which is more than double its next-closest competitor, American Express (22.9%). Having the most market share by a mile in the U.S., a country that generates 70% of its GDP from consumption, means that Visa is a go-to payment facilitator for merchants.

There's also a relatively high barrier to entry in payment processing. Though we've seen new peer-to-peer payment platforms take shape in recent years, it takes a lot of money to pay for the infrastructure needed to lay the groundwork for a payment network. There are also intangibles, such as taking years to build rapport with merchants, which make it tough for new players to succeed. Visa has just a small handful of serious competitors, and the high barrier to entry in the industry keeps it firmly at the head of the pack.

With plenty of organic expansion opportunities in Africa, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East, along with inorganic growth opportunities (e.g., its 2016 acquisition of Visa Europe), Visa looks to be unstoppable. Something tells me that retirees can overlook at 0.6% yield if Visa's stock continues to rise by a double-digit percentage every year.