3 Growth Stocks Down 84%, 28%, and 97% to Buy Right Now

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While the broad market may be uncomfortably near record highs right now, this isn’t the case for every stock. Some tickers not only didn’t get swept higher by the recent marketwide rally, but they are trading down from their peak prices. Fortunately, it’s likely for reasons that won’t last.

Here are three discounted growth stocks you might want to consider buying while they’re still trading at sale prices. Their long-term bullish cases are still well intact.

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If you’ve been keeping tabs on Roku (NASDAQ: ROKU) of late then you likely know a budding rebound was upended at the end of last month. Although its third-quarter sales and its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) were both up year over year and its top and bottom lines each topped expectations, guidance for the quarter now underway was disappointing. The company forecasted revenue of $465 million versus the analysts’ consensus forecast of $477 million, while Roku’s projected Q3 EBITDA of $30 million is short of analysts’ expectation of $36.2 million. The immediate post-earnings sell-off now leaves Roku shares 28% below their late-2023 high, and down 84% from their 2021 peak price.

However, the market is missing a couple of key things about this company’s business.

First, Roku is in the habit of topping estimates regardless of its guidance. In fact, not counting the unpredictable years of 2022 and 2023 — when the company was also logging regular losses by investing heavily in its future growth — Roku has reliably beat analysts’ consensus earnings estimates.

And the second (and much bigger) point many investors are underappreciating? The reach of Roku’s streaming ecosystem.

As of Pixalate’s most recent look, Roku accounts for 37% of North America’s connected television market. The next nearest noteworthy rival is Amazon‘s FireTV platform, but at only 15% market share it enjoys less than half of Roku’s domestic reach. Roku’s also doing very well in overseas markets like Latin America, where it’s made a concerted effort to establish itself.

Being the brand name behind the continent’s most popular streaming platform is only half the bullish argument though. Roku is also part of the streaming content landscape. Numbers from TV-ratings service Nielsen say The Roku Channel is more watched within the U.S. than Warner Bros. Discovery‘s HBO Max or Paramount‘s Paramount+. That’s not insignificant for Roku’s home-grown ad-supported streaming service.

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