Planes, Trains, and Self-Driving Automobiles

Last week, I was traveling in both San Francisco and Miami. It was a week of different transportation methods: cable cars, subway, historic streetcars, buses, airplanes, the Brightline train, Uber, Lyft, and self-driving taxis.

The technology was vastly different among them all. My favorites were the two on either end of my spectrum—the cable cars and the self-driving taxis.

Kelly Green with her Waymo driver

One of the core principles of a long-term dividend portfolio is to invest in companies that are integral to society and will be for many years to come. Transportation falls into that category.

The technology will change and the mode of transport will differ depending on the distance traveled. But people will always need and want to travel from one place to another.

Of all the modes of transportation that I used last week, a handful are publicly traded: JetBlue Airways Corp. (JBLU), Uber Technologies, Inc. (UBER), Lyft Inc. (LYFT), and Waymo’s parent company Alphabet Inc. (GOOG). JBLU, UBER, and LYFT do not pay dividends. GOOG pays $0.80 annually for a yield of just 0.44%.