Is Gold a Good Addition to Your Portfolio?

Don’t buy gold. Buy Franco-Nevada Corp. (TSX:FNV)(NYSE:FNV) instead!

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Gold bullion on a chart

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Gold can help diversify your portfolio. However, it doesn’t generate any income.

I believe that Franco-Nevada (TSX:FNV)(NYSE:FNV) is a superior investment to gold. The company is primarily a gold royalty and streaming company with a large and diversified portfolio of assets. Further, it offers a yield of about 1.3%, and it has been increasing its dividend every year.

Gold king in chess game face with the another silver team on black background (Concept for company strategy, business victory or decision)
Image source: Getty Images

As explained on Franco-Nevada’s website, royalties are ongoing economic interests in the production or future production from a property, while streams are metal purchase agreements that provide, in exchange for an upfront deposit, the right to purchase all or a portion of one or more metals produced from a mine at a preset price.

So, Franco-Nevada is a low-risk, high-margin business. Its balance sheet is clean with no long-term debt, and its recent net margin was 31.8%.

Outperforms in total returns

Franco-Nevada stock tends to outperform the market. From right before the last recession in 2007 to now, the stock has delivered an annualized rate of return of about 19.1%, which greatly outperformed the returns of 6.5% of the U.S. market (using S&P 500 as a proxy) in the period. Notably, the U.S. market generally outperforms the Canadian market or the TSX Index. So, you can assume that Franco-Nevada stock tends to outperform the TSX Index, too.

FNV Chart

FNV data by YCharts. The long-term price action of  TSX:FNV, SPY, and TSX:XIU, representing the Canadian market.

Since 2012, Franco-Nevada stock’s annualized rate of return has been 14.6%, which outperformed the U.S. market returns of 12.5%. Now, of course, there are periods in which the U.S. market beat Franco-Nevada. It goes without saying that investors should always aim to buy the stock at a discount — at least as it pertains to Franco-Nevada’s unique situation, as explained in the next section.

Franco-Nevada is always expensive

The problem with Franco-Nevada is that it always tends to trade at a premium valuation. As of writing, it trades at a price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) of over 60, while its five-year P/E is more than 190!

Let’s compare its other valuation metrics. Its price-to-operating-cash-flow ratio (P/OCF) is about 26.5, while its five-year P/OCF is about 29.9. Its price-to-book ratio (P/B) is about 2.8, while its five-year P/B is about 2.7. These valuation metrics indicate that the stock is slightly undervalued to being fairly valued.

Investor takeaway

Franco-Nevada is an intriguing investment that maintains a premium multiple because it has a large and diversified portfolio of assets, which will only become larger and more diversified over time as it adds new streams and royalties.

I think the best valuation metric to look at for an entry point in Franco-Nevada is its price-to-operating-cash-flow ratio, which indicates the stock is slightly undervalued.

Alternatively, for a simpler investing method, aim to buy the stock on meaningful dips and average into a position over time as a quality addition to your portfolio for diversification purposes.

Analysts from Thomson Reuters have a 12-month mean target of US$81.40 per share on Franco-Nevada, which indicates near-term upside potential of about 10%.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Kay Ng has no position in any of the stocks mentioned.

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