I'm Adding Another Holding to my $100,000 Real-Money Portfolio

Time waits for no one. The market has rung in the New Year, and slow-to-move investors may miss out on further gains ahead. So I'm moving quickly to name the second pick in my $100,000 portfolio.

As is the case with Ford (NYSE: F), my initial holding, it's also a well-known company. Its roots go back to 1887, when chemist (and company founder) Charles Martin Hall figured out how to make aluminum through the use of an electric current.

If you missed the initial installment, then allow me to explain. StreetAuthority is giving me $100,000 to invest in my absolute best investment ideas. I'll be sharing my trades with you for free -- but only for a limited time. This morning, I bought 1,090 shares of Ford at a price of $11.44, after a self-imposed two-day waiting period. The stock has moved up more than 5% since I mentioned it on Friday, Dec. 30, so readers who jumped on my recommendation already are showing a nice gain.

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The advances are coming from stellar sales figures for last month. Sales rose 10% from a year earlier in December, which was at the top end of the forecast consensus range. On a full-year basis, sales rose a healthy 17%. That strong finish to 2011 is why I think the current consensus earnings-per-share (EPS) forecast of $0.26 for the fourth quarter is too conservative and likely to be exceeded.

Now, on to today's business...

Buy #2: A beneficiary of a shrinking industry
The prolonged economic weakness in the United States and Europe has surely been hard on industrial firms, as demand for many goods remains well below levels seen in the middle of the last decade. Adding insult, Chinese manufacturers have ramped up quickly, flooding the world with lower-priced products.

Perhaps no companies have felt the twin pressures of falling demand and rising supply as acutely as the world's makers of aluminum. Not only has economic activity slowed in recent years in the world's largest economies, but China has in recent years built dozens of new aluminum smelters that created a glut of the lightweight shiny industrial material, which goes into everything from soda cans to premium cars.

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Making aluminum consumes lots of electricity. But one company's management made a brilliant move, building new aluminum smelters where energy is really, really cheap, in places like Iceland and Trinidad & Tobago. The fact that this company is the lowest-cost producer of aluminum in the world has made life even more difficult for rivals in China and elsewhere. That's why, when I looked at Alcoa (NYSE: AA) back in October, I mentioned that the Chinese government has begun to deprioritize aluminum.