If You're in Your 50s, Consider Buying These 3 Stocks

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Being a 50-something might have you thinking about de-risking your investments. And while it's probably closing in on time to allocate some of your nest egg to low-volatility assets like bonds for money you'll need early in retirement, it's just as important to make sure your strategy includes long-term growth. After all, the odds are in your favor that you're going to live into your 80s.

And three stocks that deserve a close look include insurance and investing giant Markel Corporation (NYSE: MKL), internet-only bank BofI Holding, Inc. (NASDAQ: BOFI), and fast-growth engineering consultancy NV5 Global Inc (NASDAQ: NVEE).

Putting profits to work generating more profits

Like most insurance companies, Markel makes most of its money by investing the float -- premiums they take in before losses are paid -- in short-term instruments like bonds. It also has generally had profitable insurance operations, while many of its competitors barely break even or even lose money on their insurance policies. But what separates Markel from most other insurers is that the company is more than just an insurer.

Smiling man sitting on floor with a piggy bank as cash falls from the sky.
Smiling man sitting on floor with a piggy bank as cash falls from the sky.

Image source: Getty Images.

Under the steady hand of co-CEO Tom Gayner, who has led the company's investing efforts for multiple decades, Markel has steadily built itself into a cash-flow machine and investing powerhouse. Its equity portfolio was worth $6 billion at the end of 2017, having generated a 25.5% return last year, while its Markel Ventures subsidiary, which is comprised of subsidiaries the company has invested in or acquired outright, now generates almost 20% of total revenue -- it produced $65 million in net income for shareholders last quarter. The company also recently made a major acquisition to expand its U.S. operations, buying State National for $919 million.

Over the past 20 years, the company's investing and growth strategy has worked incredibly well. It has more than doubled the market's returns over that period:

MKL Chart
MKL Chart

MKL data by YCharts.

And I don't think its growth story is close to being over. With a market cap around $16 billion, Markel really isn't that large, while its steady profitability, big cash flow, and valuable float provide Gayner and team substantial capital to keep putting to work.

The future of banking today

BofI Holding is one of the fastest-growing banks you'll find. Over the past decade, it has grown from less than $1.5 billion in assets to almost $9 billion, while increasing earnings per share an incredible 1,740%. Shareholders in the bank have seen enormous gains over that period as well, with the stock price up 2,650%. That's good enough to turn a $5,000 investment in BofI in early 2008 into more than $132,000 today.