Is Crocs, Inc. (CROX) the Best Small-Cap Value Stock to Buy According to Hedge Funds?

In this article, we will look at the 7 Best Small-Cap Value Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds. Let’s look at where Crocs, Inc. (CROX) stands against other small-cap value stocks.

Today’s AI-fueled era of the “Magnificient Seven” technology stocks is dominating the US stock market. However, investing with a focus on value stocks hasn’t lost its popularity. In March, a Bloomberg report detailed how many investment firms were pouring money into value stocks, primarily in sectors like energy, financials, utilities, and materials.

Among the various investors preferring these sectors, Nanette Abuhoff Jacobson, global investment strategist of Hartford Funds, who liked stocks from these “unloved sectors,” made the list. The Bloomberg report also mentioned Presilium Private Wealth, which found value investing to be attractive in the current environment.

During the 2024 Sohn Investment Conference, billionaire David Einhorn claimed that it was a great time to be a value investor, while also continuing to say that value investing is dead as an industry. When asked about these contradictory statements, he said that the value investing industry and value investing as an investing strategy are two distinct things.

Many fund managers who were paid heavily by people to research undervalued stocks for them have lost their jobs and assets under management amid a shift to index funds where “millions of dollars were redeemed” out of those conventional strategies. But Einhorn said that this development has decreased the competition in the industry, paving the way for people like him to be in a unique position to find undervalued stocks.

Are Value Stocks a Better Choice Than Growth Stocks?

On August 16, Vahan Janjigian, CIO at Greenwich Wealth Management, joined “The Exchange” on CNBC to discuss why value stocks may perform better than growth stocks in a low-rate environment. Broadly speaking, investors seem to think that lower interest rates are better for growth stocks as compared to value stocks. Janjigian believes that it also depends upon the shape of the yield curve. With the economy stabilizing and the Fed cutting interest rates, the yield curve can potentially normalize. He says that this happening can prove better for value stocks that pay good dividends than for growth stocks that do not pay dividends.

Janjigian also says that although he invests in other stocks through ETFs, he tends to be a value investor, favoring value stocks that pay good dividends and have been growing over time. He named three of his favorites, which include Pfizer, Verizon, and IBM. Viewing these stocks as substitutes for bonds, he reflects on the similarities between the two, claiming that they are long-term investments with very good yields.

Dave Sekera, Morningstar’s Chief U.S. Market Strategist, said that the best value is in the small cap category. In a CNBC interview in August, he said that the small-cap category trades at a 15% discount to their fair value, highlighting stocks like Kraft Heinz that looked like attractive investments.

Our Methodology

We first consulted stock screeners from Finviz and Yahoo Finance, along with online rankings, to create an initial list of 15 publicly traded companies with market caps between $1 billion and $10 billion (our definition of small caps) and forward P/E ratios of less than 15 as of October 1, 2024. From this list, we selected the 7 stocks with the highest number of hedge funds holders as of Q2 2024, and used that as our ranking metric. We gave preference to stocks that come from sectors like consumer, healthcare, energy, materials, and utilities.

Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter’s strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 275% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 150 percentage points (see more details here).

7 Best Small-Cap Value Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds

7 Best Small-Cap Value Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds

Crocs, Inc. (NASDAQ:CROX)

Market Cap: $8.60 billion 

Forward P/E: 10.97

EPS Growth This Year: 6.70%

Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 40

Crocs (NASDAQ:CROX) designs, markets, distributes, and sells casual lifestyle footwear and accessories for women, men, and children under the Crocs Brand and HEYDUDE Brand segments. The Crocs Brand segment offers a collection of Croslite material, a molded footwear technology formulated to create odor-resistant, comfortable, soft, lightweight, and non-marketing footwear. The HEYDUDE Brand, in contrast, operates in more than 80 countries, and offers a collection with a versatile silhouette.

The company ranks on our list of the best small-cap value stocks to buy according to hedge funds and is running on strong fundamentals. Its enterprise initiatives are bearing fruit, expanding its growth trajectory and increasing its revenue to more than $1.1 billion in Q2 2024. This marked a record for the company. To support its long-term growth, the company is boosting awareness and global relevance for new and existing customers by igniting icons across its brands. It is also diversifying its product range methodically, attracting new customers to its brands and undertaking strategic investments to drive market share gains across its Tier 1 markets.

Crocs (NASDAQ:CROX) is also evolving its partnership model to build consumer love, drive engagement, and boost brand popularity. It celebrated SpongeBob’s 25th anniversary in Q2 by creating a SpongBob and Patrick clog, unveiling the official announcement on Las Vegas Sphere. It released a number of other partnerships as well, ranging from Pringles to Treasure, Naruto, and Minions. To expand its product range, the company is continually pushing into sneaker and lifestyle opportunities as exemplified through our Salehe Juniper sneaker release. The sneakers sold out within minutes, cropping up at secondary shopping platforms for multiples of their original price of $140. This highlights the strong consumer response to the company’s new products.

It is prioritising durable growth and building several franchises, aiming to expand the company’s standing into new usage occasions and drive new and repeat purchases. According to hedge funds, the company ranks seventh on our list of the 7 best small-cap value stocks to buy.

Choice Equities Capital Management stated the following regarding Crocs, Inc. (NASDAQ:CROX) in its first quarter 2024 investor letter:

“Shares of Crocs, Inc. (NASDAQ:CROX) and Shake Shack, Inc. (SHAK) appreciated meaningfully as recent earnings results were positively viewed and some bear point debates began to move into the rearview mirror. CROX – In the case of Croc’s, the stock continues to trade at an attractive high-single-digit multiple of earnings. Importantly, the company is making significant progress in turning the tide for HeyDude after sales of the brand hit an air pocket due to higher-than-wanted inventories in the wholesale channel last year. Inventory levels have improved, enabling average selling prices to move higher, while the new HeyDude distribution center in Las Vegas has also now become operational. Along with an expansion of HeyDude-specific outlet stores, which are very high margin and drive nearly a third of Crocs’ brand North American sales, it looks like the Croc’s playbook is nearly fully in place. And just last week, the company announced Terence Reilly would return to the company as president of the brand. Bringing Reilly back into the fold seems a very promising move. He deserves a great deal of credit for Croc’s resurgence, which he described as taking it “from meme to dream” when he was previously with the company as head of marketing from 2013 to 2020. He clearly seems to have a knack for creating buzz around a brand, given his recent success at Stanley, where he was CEO after driving sales of the famed “Stanley Cup” up ten-fold to $700M in just four years. (An insightful interview with him on his approach to marketing and management – and the back story on how Stanley went viral by giving away a car to a car collision survivor – can be found here.) It seems prospective marketing success can often be as hard to predict as it is important to a brand’s vitality. But here, it looks like Reilly is a proven winner. Might he again be able to create a sensation around a brand like HeyDude, one that has high affinity amongst existing customers yet still low-brand awareness more broadly? Given recent operational improvements, the brand seems well positioned to again focus on playing offense and improved brand performance may be right around the corner”.

Overall, CROX ranks seventh among the 7 best small-cap value stocks to buy according to hedge funds. While we acknowledge the potential of CROX as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns, and doing so within a shorter timeframe. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than CROX but that trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock.

READ NEXT: $30 Trillion Opportunity: 15 Best Humanoid Robot Stocks to Buy According to Morgan Stanley and Jim Cramer Says NVIDIA ‘Has Become A Wasteland’.

Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.