3 Warren Buffett Stocks Worth Buying Now

In This Article:

Warren Buffett has built a reputation as one of history's most successful investors, leading his company Berkshire Hathaway to compound annualized returns of 21% over the last 50 years, which absolutely trounces the S&P 500's average annual return of 10% over the same stretch. That's the kind of incredible performance most investors would be thrilled to replicate, and it should come as no surprise that Buffett-backed stocks tend to attract extra attention.

In this roundtable discussion, three Motley Fool writers profile a stock in the Berkshire portfolio that they believe is worth adding to yours. Read on to see why they picked Teva Pharmaceutical Industries (NYSE: TEVA), Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL), and Sanofi SA (NYSE: SNE).

A pen sitting on top of two notebooks displaying charts and other information.
A pen sitting on top of two notebooks displaying charts and other information.

Image source: Getty Images.

A great dividend stock

George Budwell (Sanofi): French drugmaker Sanofi has been a staple of Warren Buffett's top-notch portfolio since 2006 -- and for a very good reason. Specifically, this pharma giant is currently entering its 24th consecutive year of dividend growth, making it one of the most dependable dividend growth stocks in the entire healthcare sector. And with a forward-looking yield of 4.38%, Sanofi also pays out one of the richest dividends within its big pharma peer group to boot.

Perhaps most impressively, though, Sanofi has kept its top tier dividend growing even in the face of serious threats to its top line. The drugmaker, for example, lost exclusivity for its flagship diabetes medication Lantus in 2015.

How has Sanofi kept its dividend program on track during this turbulent period? The key has been its extremely productive research partnership with Regeneron Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: REGN). This partnership has led to the FDA approvals for cholesterol medicine Praluent and eczema treatment Dupixent in recent years. As a result, Sanofi's top line is forecast to rise at a compound annual growth rate of 4% over the next six consecutive years. That's not too shabby for a company with a market cap of a whopping $103 billion.

Sanofi has also been investing heavily in its rare blood disorder franchise by acquiring Ablynx and Biogen's hemophilia spin-off Bioverativ to start the year. These back-to-back acquisitions last January brought in multiple late-stage assets, as well as a number of intriguing earlier-stage compounds that could contribute significantly to the biopharma's growth over the next decade.

In all, Sanofi has done an admirable job of setting itself up for the long term by bringing numerous high-value assets into the fold through external licensing deals or direct acquisitions. And this super aggressive approach to pipeline development should, in turn, keep the drugmaker's top-shelf dividend program headed in the right direction.