3 Value Stocks To Bet On When The Rally In Growth Shares Falters

 | Sep 22, 2020 09:17

The ongoing sell-off in equities, led by high-flying growth stocks, is an indication that the pandemic fear trade is running out of steam.  

That phenomenon, during the past six months, is behind investors’ mad rush to pump everything into a few big technology stocks, pushing their valuations to extreme levels last seen during the dot-com bubble.

While these stretched valuations caused many analysts to downgrade some big growth stocks in recent days, this correction is also offering an opportunity to buy stocks that are trading for relatively cheap valuations relative to their earnings and long-term growth potential.

The way to find these value stocks is to look for companies that have taken a back seat since the March rebound because of their temporary challenges. Some remain well positioned to deliver superior returns over the longer term. Keeping this theme in mind, below we look at three of these value stocks:

h2 1. JPMorgan Chase/h2

Banks are purely a cyclical trade, tied very closely with the direction of the economy. Currently, they also don’t present a compelling buying opportunity when interest rates are forecast to stay low over the next three years and global banks pressured by reports of alleged money laundering.

As a measure of just how hard bank stocks have been hit, the KBW NASDAQ Bank Index is down more than 35% this year. While macroeconomic conditions continue to remain unfavorable for banks, there are a few players that can survive this downturn better than their peers. JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM), the largest US-based lender, is among them due to its balance-sheet strength and the quality of its operations.

With the economy still struggling and borrowers defaulting on their obligations, JPM is quickly adjusting to this new reality. The lender set aside $6.8 billion in the first quarter and $8.9 billion in the second quarter, as it prepared for growing defaults from borrowers and other pandemic-related losses.