In this article, we will discuss the 8 most undervalued value stocks to buy according to analysts.
The Concept of Value Investing
Value investing is the investment strategy where an investor tends to buy a stock for less than it is worth and holds on to it to realize its actual worth. Thus, the stock is undervalued relative to its fundamentals. CNN reports that the concept of value investing goes back almost 100 years ago to Benjamin Graham who supported using fundamental analysis to buy stocks at a discount to their intrinsic value. Value stocks are typically more mature and less volatile.
Warren Buffett is one of the top value investors who has created a lot of wealth using this strategy. During the financial crisis, Buffett bought Bank of America which is still one of his significant holdings. At Berkshire’s 2023 annual shareholder’s meeting, Buffett emphasized that new things such as tech don’t take away opportunities from value investors in response to the late vice-chairman Charlie Munger’s statement.
According to Munger, value investors should get used to making less money since a lot of them are competing for diminished opportunities. Countering this view, Buffet didn’t see fewer opportunities for value investors in the future by being more optimistic. He explained the bright value investing prospects by stating:
“What gives you opportunities is other people doing dumb things”
Value Investing in 2024
On April 25, Bill Nygren, Oakmark Funds CIO and portfolio manager, appeared on CNBC to talk about the large spread between value stocks and growth stocks. He explained how Oakmark Funds looks at things in the long term with short-term news being just noise and has a portfolio that has kept moving lower and lower in P/E even if the market has risen over the past year. The biggest opportunity is created by the unusually large spreads in P/E multiples. He emphasized how one good thing about companies trading at low P/Es is that one doesn’t have to believe that others are going to see them as good businesses.
On September 23, Nygren again joined CNBC’s ‘Squawk on the Street’ to shed light on the prevailing scenario. He stated how some academics now think that there are not enough value investors to force convergence to fair value anymore. According to him, the issue relates to the number of investors who want positive price momentum in their portfolios nowadays and don’t like to buy companies that have fallen to a cheap price.
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He also talked about how the S&P 500 is not so diversified anymore and that investors would revisit the idea of it as a low-risk way to invest in equities. While the S&P 500 was an index where somebody could put the majority of their capital thinking it was reasonably diversified, the technology sector is becoming more dominant within the index. There is no reason to believe that an individual is best off if their investments match the economic production or the market value of this production. He called an S&P 500 investment a pretty heavy bet on tech the way the market is valuing tech stocks currently.
Will Value Stocks Dominate Growth Stocks in the Future?
Research by Hartford Funds has predicted a rebound for value stocks after growth stocks have dominated them, a trend that was catalyzed by the ascendence of mega-cap US tech stocks. The research revolves around how certain rules of thumb such as value’s ability to outperform being dependent on the economic cycle and value dominated by certain mature and cyclical sectors, are to be reconsidered. The research unveiled that the three factors driving value outperformance are higher inflation, higher real interest rates, and higher economic growth (real GDP), with the impact of these drivers varying from one regime to another.
The research predicts a positive outlook for the value sector over the next 3 to 5 years. Inflation is expected to remain elevated due to several factors including tight labor markets, shrinking working-age populations, rising geopolitical tensions, and supply-chain disruptions among others. Considering an environment of high inflation, real rates will be high due to the monetary policy. In such circumstances, attractive value opportunities could be found in financials such as insurance companies, asset managers, and payment services.
Regarding the assumption that value stocks are concentrated in more mature sectors, the patterns have shifted over time since value has become more diversified and less concentrated than growth. While energy and financials made up 13% and 25% of the value index 10 years ago, the value mix constitutes 20% financials, 16% healthcare, followed by 15% industrials, 13% IT, 9% consumer staples, and only 7% energy. The surprisingly large weight of IT in value is driven by industries such as hardware, semiconductors, IT services, and communications equipment while software companies are more likely in the growth sector.
The risk against this outlook for value stocks supported by structurally higher inflation and real rates as well as increased diversification is generative AI, something that can still enable growth companies to have a multiyear period of outperformance. With that being said, let’s move to the 8 most undervalued value stocks to buy according to analysts.
Our Methodology:
In order to compile a list of the 8 most undervalued value stocks to buy according to analysts, we first used a stock screener to identify value stocks with PE ratios under 20. We focused on companies trading in industries that are traditionally saturated by value companies. These industries include consumer staples, financials, energy, and materials. From the resultant dataset, we picked 8 stocks with the highest upsides, as of October 15.
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8 Most Undervalued Value Stocks To Buy According To Analysts
8. Enterprise Products Partners L.P. (NYSE:EPD)
Average Upside Potential: 16.56%
Forward P/E: 10.26
EPS Growth This Year: 7.10%
Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 23
Enterprise Products Partners L.P. (NYSE:EPD) is a leading North American provider of midstream energy services to producers and consumers of natural gas, natural gas liquids, crude oil, refined products, and petrochemicals. The company’s origins started with Enterprise Products Company, formed in 1968 as a wholesale marketer of natural gas liquids.
Enterprise Products Partners has an integrated footprint with geographic, product, and market diversification. EPD has built a resilient portfolio that is recession-resistant. It stands apart by being the only midstream company to grow Adjusted CFFO per unit and reduce unit count without material asset sales. Investors can consider that the firm has demonstrated 26 consecutive years of distribution growth throughout business cycles. It has returned $54.4 billion to unitholders in distributions & buybacks since its IPO. With $6.7 billion in major capital projects under construction, the potential for further capital returns to shareholders and cash flow growth remains bright.
For the fiscal second quarter, Enterprise Products Partners L.P. (NYSE:EPD) reported net income attributable to common unitholders of $1.4 billion, a 12% increase compared to $1.3 billion for the second quarter of 2023. EPD successfully handled a near-record 12.6 million BPD of equivalent pipeline volumes and 2.2 million BPD of marine terminal volumes despite the second quarter being typically slow. Gross operating margin for the NGL Pipeline & Services segment and Natural Gas Pipelines & Services segment rose 19% and 23%, year-over-year respectively.
The aforementioned robust operating performance drove a 12% increase in earnings per common unit on a fully diluted basis, an 11% increase in adjusted cash flow from operations, and a 5% increase in cash distribution per unit for the second quarter of 2024 as compared to Q2 2023. With distribution stability and growth as a core focus, strong fundamentals, and an average upside potential of 16.56%, Enterprise Products Partners L.P. (NYSE:EPD) ranks on our list.
7. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE:MUFG)
Average Upside Potential: 17.74%
Forward P/E: 12.64
EPS Growth This Year: 5.80%
Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 14
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE:MUFG) is a global financial services group and one of the biggest banking institutions in Japan.
MUFG boasts cross-border expertise and a global network spanning more than 50 countries and regions. The firm benefits from a hard-earned trust backed by a history of more than 360 years and a strong customer base. MUFG’s unique business portfolio maximizes the comprehensive strength of its group. The firm has one of the largest domestic and global customer bases of any Japanese bank which serves as a source of future competitiveness and profitability. Additionally, it has a significant exposure in the APAC region.
For the 1st quarter of the fiscal 2025, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE:MUFG) reported net operating profits of ¥678.1 billion, up by ¥121.5 billion year-over-year. This was a result of a promising performance in customer segments domestically and globally. Results by business group were robust with gross profits for all business groups except Global Markets climbing year-over-year.
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE:MUFG) boasts a worldwide reach, product capabilities, and competitiveness as a strong overall group. As of Q2, the stock is held by 14 hedge funds.