Why You Should Buy This Cheap Beer Stock

 | Aug 18, 2014 02:23AM ET

Let’s say you walk into a local bar after work and sit down for a refreshing beer. Then you notice that one of your favorite beers, the Sam Adams Cold Snap, is listed for $10.

Since it’s beer we’re talking about, not a 12-year-old Scotch, you look for other options. It turns out that Kirin Ichiban, which is also a very good beer, is on sale for $1. That’s a bargain, so you buy one.

You just demonstrated a basic economic principle – the law of demand. As prices rise, consumers’ demand for a product or service declines, due in part to the substitution effect.

However, the financial markets work in a very different manner…

You see, investors seem to like stocks better when they become more expensive. In economics, this is known as a “Giffen good.”

Luckily, human psychology and crowd behavior create an opportunity to profit from being rational and taking a perspective different than that of the masses. In other words, those who are willing to take an objective look at a stock’s value, and not be biased by its popularity, are rewarded over time.

Beer stocks are popular nowadays because their underlying businesses are stable and they pay solid dividends. Like many companies in the consumer staples sector, beer stocks have become coveted, driving up their valuations.

But let’s see if we can find any value among the brewers that ferment these wonderful libations…

h2 Brewing Industry/h2

When I think of beer stocks, Anheuser-Busch InBev (NYSE:BUD) immediately comes to mind. This behemoth was formed with the merger of Anheuser-Busch and InBev in 2008, and is now domiciled in Belgium. The shares that trade under the BUD ticker are American depositary receipts (ADRs).