What Is A Quality Stock And When Are They Buys

I recently wrote an article, “The Generation Portfolio,” in which I set forth my goal of finding quality stocks for an account I am setting up from scratch. Since I did not explain there what I meant by “quality,” and instead only gave a list of stocks that I considered quality plays, someone asked me what I meant by the term. Since we are all looking for quality plays, below I will set forth my own ideas of what I consider to be quality plays, and when they are – and are not – attractive pick-ups.

What is a “Quality Stock”

The term “Blue Chip Stock” came out of the 1920s, when Oliver Gingold of Dow Jones coined the term based upon the use of blue chips in poker for the highest dollar amounts. Generally, the term is used for stocks that are considered to be of the highest quality. In the past, the stock of companies such as IBM (IBM), General Motors (GM) and General Electric (GE) were treated reverently as the ultimate Blue Chips, producing high returns year after year. They became household names, and the best of the best received the even higher accolade of “Bellwether Stocks,” meaning they were considered leading indicators for the market as a whole. A few decades ago, for instance, radio reports regularly would report how IBM was doing along with the major averages.

Just throwing a term around and applying it to certain companies, though, doesn’t explain what the term actually means or make it useful. Beyond the amorphous attributes of being successful and well-known companies, there is no hard and fast definition of Blue Chips. We can, however, come up with a working definition for our own use, and we will call them “Quality Stocks.”

The Importance of Brands

Brands distinguish one product from another. As customers use a company’s product, they form impressions about the product’s quality and value. Over time, those associations transfer to the name of the product itself, and thence to the company. That is how a brand is built.