2Anno·

Topic Sin Stocks - Stocks that are considered a sin

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Hello, Community,


Today I’d like to introduce you to a category of stocks that’s likely to divide opinion. I’m talking about so-called “sin stocks.”

While many focus on ESG, sustainability, and the like, there are also investors who are looking for the exact opposite. I’m one of them.


Some people traditionally associate sin stocks with the alcohol, tobacco, and gambling sectors. I’d like to make it a bit more interesting and expand the scope of “sin.”

To do this, I’m drawing on the seven deadly sins and would like to introduce a few stocks that (may) be associated with them: pride, greed, lust, envy, gluttony, wrath, and sloth.


First things first: I’d like to avoid moral debates as much as possible. If this is already making you gasp for air, please skip this post.


Sin 1: Pride.

Those who are to perish first become proud; and pride comes before a fall


This includes companies operating in the luxury segment. For example $RMS (+0,55%) , $RACE (+0,54%) or this one, which is very popular $MC (-0,5%). What makes them interesting, in my view, is that the more luxurious they are, the less dependent they are on economic cycles. The super-rich hardly care when an economic crisis strikes. On top of that, they can achieve exorbitant margins, since pricing simply has to reflect the nature of luxury.


Sin 2: Greed

For greed is the root of all evil


The financial sector and its stocks can be counted among the “greed” stocks. For example, $JPM (+0,49%) or $DBK (+1,38%) , but also commodity companies such as $XOM

To be honest, I’m less familiar with this sector than with others—the financial industry is generally less interesting due to its lack of transparency.

I find commodity companies more interesting—perhaps even “suppliers” such as $NE (+2,93%) , which are manufacturers of oil rigs.


Sin 3: Lust


I don’t have any stocks in this sector in my portfolio myself. For quite some time, I’ve been $RICK (+1,83%) —they operate in the “adult entertainment” industry and run strip clubs. They also run restaurants (“Bombshells”) where the waitresses’ uniforms consist of very little fabric. In my view, however, these Bombshells aren’t that attractive, which is why I didn’t invest.

You could certainly also include apps like $GRND (-1,43%) in this category as well.

Do you have or know of any stocks you’d classify here?


Sin 4: Envy


This category includes cosmetics stocks such as $OR (+0,65%) or social media stocks like $META (+5,81%) . My portfolio is also underrepresented here.


Sin 5: Gluttony

Binge drinking and gluttony characterize people who have lost their way


The classic among sin stocks. This category includes alcohol companies such as $DGE (+0,84%) , tobacco companies such as $PM (+0,68%) or fast-food companies like $MCD (-0,06%)

An even more extreme example would probably be $TSN (+0,32%) a meat producer.

Since tobacco and alcohol (can) be addictive, there’s a strong lock-in effect. That’s likely why many investors steer clear of such stocks.

I consider $MNST (+0,99%) one of the most exciting “gluttony” stocks. As a manufacturer of energy drinks, they remind me a bit of tobacco companies, though they’re hardly regulated and can advertise freely. Strong growth in the market—and in the stock.


Sin 6: Wrath


The second classic. Wrath encompasses all stocks in the defense industry. Still frowned upon from an ESG perspective just a few years ago, they’re now almost back in vogue. $LMT (+1,67%) , $RTX (+0,76%) or $RHM (-1,8%) should be familiar to most people. They are heavily dependent on government contracts and thus on political decisions. However, the trend over the next few years should be upward.

In my view, an exciting “Wrath” stock is $AXON (-2,8%) . It’s a supplier to law enforcement, primarily in the U.S.—for example, through body cameras and Tasers. It was at $90 just before a buying opportunity—and I unfortunately missed it.


Sin 7: Sloth

Don’t be sluggish when you need to be diligent


One could include companies here that contribute to inactivity or passivity. First and foremost, the gambling industry. I see the most exciting stock here in $EVO (-0,94%). It’s one of the stocks with the highest weighting in my portfolio. It’s a “supplier” for online casinos. Growth is enormous—the gambling industry is still very much analog. But the online segment is growing at double-digit rates annually—just like Evolution Gaming. Plus, it pays a nice dividend.

Otherwise, you can also look at various brick-and-mortar casino operators.


That was my tour of the “sin stocks.”

Now I’d be interested to know which exciting sin stocks you have.

And also, whether you see any other “sin” sectors.


By the way, I’ve had the prison operator $GEO (+0,68%) in mind the whole time—it seems to me to be the final stop for many sins.

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26 Commenti

immagine del profilo
Thank you for the good post. I love the sins shares. Is my silent protest against the leftist ideologues in government. 😂
34
immagine del profilo
@Hockey_Scout That sounds very clever.
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immagine del profilo
A few years ago you were tarred and feathered if you invested in armaments - today you are put in the green corner for it 😂
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immagine del profilo
$VOW I see it as the ultimate sin stock, because cheating your own customers on a large scale like this is rarely seen
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immagine del profilo
@Michimessi I would say that this happens much (!) more often. The only problem is that it doesn't always come out 😄
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immagine del profilo
Funny approach. My opinion on this. Better to make money from sins than to leave the profit to someone else. Because one thing is clear: someone will make money from it. With something like gambling, the customers have to stop. Or the state has to intervene. Not the investor 🤷🏼‍♂️

I'd rather invest in gambling than put my money on red. The expected value in roulette is negative. The casino wins.
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immagine del profilo
2Anno
Very cool article... Thanks 👍🏻
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immagine del profilo
Classify a gambling company under inertia? Well, more like greed, sorry. Maybe something like Netflix for the inertia category?
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immagine del profilo
@CashDividendGamer Justified reference. Perhaps too classic an approach after all. The entertainment industry probably fits better across the board, Netflix certainly fits. Also think of something like $EA - they also have diabolical loot boxes... are we already back to gambling? ;)
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immagine del profilo
@Money-Man Microtransactions are extremely diabolical 😈. When it comes to pay-2-win or simplified unlocking of content, you can certainly classify it as inertia 😅.
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immagine del profilo
Almost everything. If it's not exploitation of people, then it's some kind of environmental story, animal testing, turning a blind eye to dictatorships and oppression based on growth and profit, weapons, harmful consumption, etc.
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immagine del profilo
Schau dir mal RCI Hospitality Holdings Inc an.
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immagine del profilo
@W0io he has already written
immagine del profilo
What about $LISN?
...would fit the 3rd sin...and also sinfully more expensive. ✌️😉
immagine del profilo
@Stullen-Portfolio What kind of sick value does that have! Or is there a mistake?
immagine del profilo
@Stullen-Portfolio the sweet temptation 😄 @Enea91 that's not a mistake, the share really costs that much. As a shareholder, you get a case of chocolate from the company once a year, as far as I know.
I think Berkshire A shares cost over 300k each. There's hardly any upper limit.
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immagine del profilo
@Enea91
Not a mistake, not sick...pure indulgence and a truly delicate temptation 😬🍫😋💫
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immagine del profilo
@Money-Man
Incidentally, the dividend suitcase is only available if you are present at the AGM 🙄
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immagine del profilo
I wish I had set up a savings plan instead of eating shit all these years...
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immagine del profilo
@Enea91
No indulgence without remorse 😇
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immagine del profilo
@Enea91 can buy the participation certificate for 1/10 of the share price. https://www.boerse.de/dividenden/Lindt-und-Spruengli-Partizipationsschein-Aktie/CH0010570767
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immagine del profilo
A slight mix-up with the 6th sin and $PLTR instead of $PANR?
immagine del profilo
@TheRealInan ah thanks for the tip. I meant $RTX (formerly Raytheon). PLTR can certainly also be counted as a sin stock, at least as far as the government division is concerned.
Let me put it simply and banal:
What do you think of dubious companies?
That's right! The shares! 😂
immagine del profilo
Thank you, great contribution. It really added value, thank you very much. 👍🏼
immagine del profilo
Vonovia is probably my biggest sin stock
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