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Are big name stocks worth designer price tags?

By Bryan Borzykowski

How much would you be willing to spend on a single share of stock? How about

the equivalent of half of your monthly salary? That s how much some shares are

selling for as optimism has returned to global equity markets.

For the average investor, equities that trade in the hundreds or thousands of

dollars, euros or local currency can pose a problem.

Most people place modest investments in stocks and many couldn t buy any

shares of these expensive equities, said Danny Cox, head of financial planning

at UK-based adviser firm Hargreaves Lansdown. Buying a single share in some of

these companies can seriously dent your personal finances, he added.

Even if financial experts think the stock price is fair and likely to climb

more, individual investors still have to shell out a large lump sum to buy the

shares in the first place. Still, there are some ways to get a piece of hot

stocks, even if they are trading for more than you might spend on a diamond

ring, or even a car.

One share of Warren Buffett s Berkshire Hathaway will set you back about

$181,000. Banque Privee Edmond de Rothchild, a Switzerland-based private bank,

is selling for about SWF15,855 a share ($17,382). Japan s Nippon Building Fund,

a Tokyo-based real estate investment trust, goes for 1,184,000 ($11,849), a

share, while even global brands, such as Apple and MasterCard, cost more than

$500 a share to buy. Global technology company Google currently goes for about

$1,040 per share.

If I was starting out I wouldn t buy one share of Google, said Mike Ser, an

experienced investor and trader coach at Ser Man Traders in Vancouver, Canada.

I want it at a lower price.

Why so high?

Companies have several ways to bring down their share price. For one, they can

split the stock. That halves the trading price and doubles the number of shares

outstanding. But some companies want to keep their share prices high.

They don t want the speculative shareholder who might buy and sell more

rapidly, said Jason Voss, a former portfolio manager who is now content

director at the CFA Institute, a global association of investment

professionals. Clearly, if you re going to pay $180,000 a share for Berkshire,

you have to carefully consider what you re doing.

A higher price makes it harder to get in and out of the stock quickly, said

Voss. Companies want long-term investors who will stick with the business.

For investors who invest for the long term, the number of shares they hold

shouldn t matter, said Voss. If you own 100 shares of a $500 stock or 1000

shares of a $50 stock and both go up 20%, the gain will be the same.

Long-term investors should also ignore the price per share, and instead hone in

on financial ratios such as price-to-earnings, said Voss. The commonly used PE

ratio measures the price someone is willing to pay for each dollar of earnings.

Always examine the earnings, revenues and profit increases that move a stock s

price higher, said Voss and not the individual share s monetary amount.

Buy anyway?

Many companies that are selling for sky-high valuations are still money-making

machines, said James Angel, a finance professor at Georgetown University,

Washington D.C. Some should be a staple in a portfolio, he added.

Some high-price-tag businesses are considered cheap by investment managers. For

instance, Serviceflats Invest NV, a real estate investment trust based in

Belgium, is selling for 13,400 euros ($18,131) and is trading at 14 times

earnings less than the average PE of 18 for the US benchmark Standard & Poor

s500 index which some managers say is cheap. But on the same basis, some

analysts think Google is growing fast enough to justify its PE ratio of 29,

especially since other high-growth internet companies, such as Facebook or

LinkedIn, have much higher PE ratios than that.

Still, at these prices, many investors won t be able to buy more than just a

few of these shares themselves. For example, if you have $50,000, you could buy

100 shares of Google, but you would not have enough money left over to

diversify into other stocks.

If someone doesn t have the money to buy more than a few shares, then they re

placing a bet on one stock, said Cynthia Kett, a Canadian financial adviser

based in Toronto. That would be a very risky portfolio.

How to get a piece

Fortunately, there are alternatives.

The easiest way to buy into these companies is through exchange-traded funds,

said Kett. Interest in these products is growing rapidly around the world.

Deutsche Bank said that global ETFs grew by 30% year-on-year between 2011 and

2012 in part because they help investors buy pricey stocks cheap.

For $85 a share an investor can purchase The Vanguard Group s Information

Technology ETF and get access to Apple, Google and Visa.

Usually these big companies are in the top 10 or 15 holdings of the fund, she

said. You re getting exposure to those businesses without being significantly

overweight in any one.

Mutual funds also offer a way to buy higher-priced stocks for less, said Cox.

As with ETFs, investors can buy industry-specific funds to get exposure to some

of these stocks.

If you do want the specific stock, though, you could be out of luck. Even if it

s still attractively valued, you can t ignore the costs.

Yes, people should be looking at earnings and other fundamentals, said Cox.

But you ve also got to think about how much that transaction will cost.