3 Top Large-Cap Stocks to Buy in October

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With October dates being crossed off the calendar, investors are moving through the final quarter of 2018 looking for the companies that have what it takes to overcome competition, adapt to unexpected challenges, and elevate portfolio performance in years to come. While small-cap stocks can post more explosive gains on lower pure-dollar sales and earnings growth, there are also advantages to large companies that can leverage their size and associated competitive advantages to expand the reach of their businesses and shore up strong market positions.

For this roundtable, we asked three Motley Fool contributors to shine some spotlight on a top large-cap stock to buy this month. Read on to see why they identified Nike (NYSE: NKE), IBM (NYSE: IBM), and AT&T (NYSE: T) as companies that are poised to deliver wins for shareholders.

A running bull in front of four arrows moving up and to the right.
A running bull in front of four arrows moving up and to the right.

Image source: Getty Images.

Bigger doesn't always mean slower

Demitri Kalogeropoulos (Nike): Its shares are near all-time highs following the impressive quarterly report it released late last month. But there's more room for growth ahead that powers healthy long-term returns for Nike investors.

The sports footwear and apparel titan (finally) returned to robust sales gains in the key U.S. market recently, with growth speeding up to a 6% rate to kick off fiscal 2019, up from 3% in the prior quarter. Its strong inventory position promises to keep that momentum going while generating improved profitability, too.

Nike is predicting faster sales gains and rising profit margins over the next few years thanks to a mix of several favorable trends that investors can already see lifting its business. These include a shift toward high-margin direct-to-consumer sales, an influx of innovative product releases, and robust demand in international markets.

Nike knows that its dominant global market position and strong finances are key competitive assets, and executives plan to press those advantages to maximum effect. It won't be cheap to build the world-class digital fulfillment and marketing capabilities that management is targeting. But, if recent results are any indication, Nike can make progress on those critical initiatives while delivering robust earnings growth to its shareholders.

Sitting out the rally

Tim Green (International Business Machines): Many large-cap tech stocks have soared this year, to the point where valuations look downright scary in some cases. But IBM has missed out, despite trading for less than 11 times earnings. Pessimism continues to keep IBM stock down, and that's an opportunity for investors willing to wait for the market to correct its mistake.