Forget Penny Stocks, Your Money Is Better Off in These 3 Companies

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Penny stocks are the lottery tickets of the stock market. For every penny stock that goes on to be a long-term winner, there are hundreds of others that have little or no future. It's not a surprise. Low-priced stocks are rife with danger because most trade over the counter to avoid the oversight and disclosure requirements of larger stock exchanges.

Thus, a random sampling of penny stocks would reveal companies with real problems -- management teams that run the business to fund their personal spending, stock promoters who hope to pump up the share price to dump stock on unsuspecting investors, and companies who have gone through a laundry list of auditors in short periods of time.

Below, three Fool.com contributors make the case for Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), AerCap Holdings (NYSE: AER), and Realty Income (NYSE: O) as stocks to buy and hold instead.

Go for the gold, man

Dan Caplinger (Goldman Sachs): Penny stocks are the bottom end of the funnel of capital into corporate America, with tiny companies -- both reputable and disreputable -- fighting for investors' money. At the other end of the spectrum, you'll find Goldman Sachs, which is one of Wall Street's oldest and most prestigious financial companies. Goldman commands the industry, with its institutional investor services, proprietary trading, investment banking advice, and personal financial services all contributing to a growing pie of profit. Even after facing billions of dollars in fines in the aftermath of the financial crisis 10 years ago, Goldman has bounced back sharply and is stronger than ever.

Goldman shares have been under pressure lately, but there's a lot to like about the company's prospects. Of particular note are Goldman's efforts to make a bigger splash in consumer banking, with its Marcus service offering savings accounts and loans. Interestingly, because Goldman doesn't have an extensive network of branches like most of its Big Bank rivals, it can act almost like an internet bank in the consumer space while still getting the brand recognition from its Wall Street operations. When you combine that with the investment banking prowess it's always had, Goldman Sachs looks like a smart opportunity right now.

A pile of pennies.
A pile of pennies.

Image source: Getty Images.

The market has yet to reward this high-quality company

Jordan Wathen (AerCap Holdings): This business is as simple as it gets: AerCap buys aircraft and leases them back out to the airline industry and other commercial operators.

AerCap receives a steady stream of cash flows from long-term leases that can last as long as 10 or 15 years, and airlines can afford to put more planes in service, since they aren't limited by how many planes they can afford to buy outright.