One of the Safest, Easiest Ways for Dividend Investors to Play the Emerging Markets

Here's a trivia question courtesy of High-Yield International's Chief Strategist, Paul Tracy: What's the world's most popular brand of beer?

Budweiser? Close, but no cigar. Belgium-based (yes, Belgium) Anheuser-Busch InBev (NYSE: BUD) is the worlds' largest brewer. And its top brand isn't Budweiser, but Bud Light. Even so, Bud Light is only the world's second-most popular brand of beer.

If you're a subscriber to High-Yield International, then you already know the correct answer: Snow beer.

Never heard of it? That's not surprising. After all, Snow is the most popular brand in China. It's a product of China Resources Snow Breweries, a joint venture owned by U.K.-based SABMiller (SBMRY) and Chinese conglomerate China Resources Enterprise (CRHKY).

Snow Breweries is estimated to control 5% of the global beer market by sales volume, more than Bud Light and Budweiser combined. Five percent may not sound like much, but it comes to more than 17 billion bottles of beer a year.

So why bring all this up?

Featured in the current issue of High-Yield International is a look at a sector that typically weathers periods of economic uncertainty in profitable fashion -- alcohol and tobacco companies.

Such companies may not be to every investor's taste, but there is no arguing what they can do for your money.

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Thanks to global economic concerns, investors have flocked to this stable corner of the market. Indeed, the four tobacco and alcohol stocks in Paul's High-Yield International model portfolios have provided average total returns of 11.5% year to date.

But that's only part of the story.

I'm not telling you anything new by recommending defensive stocks when the market is volatile. But what I don't think most people know is that some of the best opportunities in this arena aren't even based in the United States.

As disposable income and middle classes expand in China and other emerging markets, so does demand for goods and services, including alcohol and tobacco products.

In the case of beer, while sales languish in the United States (down 1% in 2011, according to the Brewers Association, a trade group) and much of the West, sales are on the rise in China and other emerging-market countries -- and with room to run.

On a per-capita basis, Chinese consumers drink just a little more than 37 liters of beer per person per year, compared with 77 liters in the United States, 72 in Brazil and 115 for Germany, according to Paul's High-Yield International research.

As Paul noted in his latest issue, that's especially good news for the aforementioned SABMiller, the world's second-largest brewer.