Companies that are 20, 30, 50 years old have put their best years behind them.
You can't blame them for getting tired. They'd done it all and seen it all, and there's hardly a place they can go that they haven't already been.
Take Woolworth. It's been around for more than 100 years - several generations of Americans grew up shopping at Woolworth's. At one point, there was a Woolworth's outlet in every city and town in America. That's when the company ran out of room to grow.
Recently, Woolworth has suffered a couple of unprofitable years. It can still make a profit, but it will never be the spectacular performer it was when it was younger. Old companies that were great earners in the past can't be expected to keep up the momentum. A few of them have - Wrigley's, Coca-Cola, Emerson Electric, and McDonald's come to mind. But these are exceptions.
US Steel, General Motors, and IBM are 3 prime examples of former champions whose most exciting days are behind them - although IBM and GM are having a rebound. US Steel was once an incredible hulk, the first billion-dollar company on earth. Railroads needed steel, cars needed steel, skyscrapers needed steel, and US Steel provided 60% of it. At the turn of this century, no company dominated its industry the way US Steel dominated steel, and no stock was as popular as US Steel stock. It was the most actively traded issue on Wall Street.
When a magazine wanted to illustrate America's power and glory, it ran a picture of a steel mill, with the fire in the furnaces and the liquid metal poureing like hot lava into the waiting molds. We are a nation of factories then, and a good deal of our wealth and power came from the mill towns of the East and the Midwest.
The steel business was a fantastic business to be in, and US Steel prospered through both world wars and six different presidents. The stock hit an all-time high of $108 7/8 in August 1950.
This was the beginning of the electronic age and the end of the industrial age and the glory of steel, and it would ahve been the perfect time for investors to sell their US Steel shares and buy shares in IBM. But you had to be very farsighted and unsentimental investor to realize this. After all, US Steel was classed as a blue chip, Wall Street's term of endearment for pretigious companies that are expected to excel forever. Hardly anyone would have predicted that in 1995, US Steel stock would be selling for less than it sold for in 1959.
To put this decline in perspective, the DJIA was bumping up against the 500 level in 1959, and it's gone up more than 4000 points since. So while stocks in the Dow have increased in value more than 8 times over, US Steel has gone downhill. Loyal shareholders have died and gone to heaven waiting for US Steel to reclaim its lost glory.
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