A Terrible Start: 3 Ultra-Safe Stocks For A Market Bust

 | Jan 11, 2016 01:23AM ET

Think our beloved bull market might be headed to the butcher shop? Here are three stocks that offer safety when good markets turn bad.

In fact, you could argue they’re a better move than the traditional first-choice safe haven... Uncle Sam’s debt.

When the world’s economy threatens to shrink, the financial textbooks tell us American Treasurys are the safest bet. But the history books tell a different story...

That the state’s credit is hardly ever the strongest in the land.

The idea stands true today. While Uncle Sam is certainly good for his word (for now)... there’s a trio of American companies deemed even more reliable.

If you recall, the credit rating agency Standard and Poor’s shocked the world when it downgraded America’s rating in 2011 after Congress battled fiercely over the nation’s borrowing limit.

We went from a coveted AAA rating to AA+.

Yet, in the years since, three American companies have managed to keep the coveted AAA score. They are Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: N:JNJ), Microsoft (Nasdaq: O:MSFT) and Exxon Mobil (NYSE: N:XOM). They represent the strongest balance sheets in the land.

All three pay an annual dividend of more than 2.5%... far better than anything you’ll get from Uncle Sam.

Now, to be clear, the AAA credit rating represents the companies’ debt, not the value or safety of their equity. So let’s take a look at the three stocks to see how they hold up when the markets head south.

h2 Johnson & Johnson /h2

With one of the most stable businesses and balance sheets in corporate America, it’s no wonder this mega-conglomerate gets two thumbs up from the ratings agency.

Johnson & Johnson is a strong recession-resistant play thanks to its product lineup that’s largely insulated from the whims of a volatile economy. Remember, folks still need Tylenol and Band-Aids even when their paychecks shrink.

A quick look at a 10-year chart shows the company offers protection in a storm (it solidly outpaced the S&P during every major downturn over the last decade), but its shares don’t hesitate to rise when the sun comes out.