3 Stocks That Turned $10,000 Into $1.4 Million

One of the most powerful ways to build wealth is to invest in great companies and then hold them for the long term. And while investing in young, growth-oriented companies looking to disrupt an industry or even creating new ones can pay off with big profits, you don't have to count on high-risk ideas to generate enormous wealth.

Case in point: $10,000 divided equally into Walt Disney Co (NYSE: DIS), Nucor Corporation (NYSE: NUE), and American Express Company (NYSE: AXP) in 1980 would have made you a millionaire, with total returns of more than $1.4 million at last count. That's pretty remarkable for three companies that had already been around for decades at that point.

But that's only part of the story: That original $10,000 investment would generate nearly $25,000 in annual dividends today. That's the amazing wealth-building power of compounding returns. It's also a reminder that the secret to amazing investing returns isn't really a secret. Investing in great companies at reasonable prices and holding them for as long as possible really does work.

A man smiles with his arms up as money falls down from above.
A man smiles with his arms up as money falls down from above.

Image source: Getty Images.

How the House of Mouse became much, much more

Back in 1980, Disney was already a global brand that had been entertaining people for a half-century. Over the past couple of decades, however, Disney has gone from two theme parks and a movie and animation studio to a global entertainment powerhouse. It now owns major broadcast networks, including ABC and ESPN, as well as film studios Pixar, Marvel, and Lucasfilm. These acquisitions, as well as the expansion of the Disney theme park business around the world, were the key drivers behind 660% earnings-per-share growth and 818% total returns since 1995.

An illustration of Darth Vader and other Star Wars characters.
An illustration of Darth Vader and other Star Wars characters.

Image source: Disney.

But worries that the acceleration of the cord-cutting trend -- that is, people dropping cable packages -- will hit Disney's profits have caused the stock price to move up and down a lot the past few years. That trend is already hurting the bottom line, with operating income at the media networks segment having peaked in 2015 and declined the past two years.

The steady stream of cable cancelers will continue to affect ESPN, but the media giant has irons in the fire to cut those losses and find a new source of viewer growth. The first is a transition to stand-alone streaming services, which is particularly appealing to sports fans who want to leave cable behind. And with the acquisition of Twenty-First Century Fox's (NASDAQ: FOXA)(NASDAQ: FOX) movie studios and titles and regional sports networks, Disney's rich collection of content -- both sports and popular movie and TV titles -- is about to get even richer.