12 Cheap Global Stocks to Buy

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In this article, we will look at 12 cheap global stocks to buy now. If you want to explore similar stocks, you can also take a look at 5 Cheap Global Stocks to Buy.

U.S. Stocks Vs Non-U.S. Stocks

On February 28 director of institutional asset management at Ritholtz Wealth Management, Ben Carlson, appeared in an interview on TD Ameritrade where he talked about investing in U.S. stocks versus non-U.S. stocks. Carlson discussed how investing in the United States has long been viewed as a beneficial strategy due to the consistent positive returns over time. However, he discussed that there is potential for success in international investing as well. Carlson pointed out that according to The Credit Suisse Global Yearbook, since 1900 developed stock markets outside of the US have generated an average annual return of 4-6% after inflation adjustments. Carlson said that while international stocks have lagged since the global financial crisis of 2008 and U.S. tech stocks have driven outperformance, it is important to note that historically other regions of the world have done well.

Ben Carlson said that non-US stocks have been looking "way more attractive if you value them at anything, cash flows, earnings, price-to-book, whatever it is". Carlson thinks this is because the U.S. is dominated by growth stocks, and primarily tech stocks, and there is more value oversees in financials, industrials, and materials stocks. Carlson noted that value stocks tend to do better in a period of high inflation and rising interest rates, such as the one we are in right now, and so he is bullish on non-U.S. stocks since they are "mostly value stocks".

Ben Carlson further elaborated on the underperformance of international stocks relative to U.S. stocks in the past. He noted that there are several factors that contributed to this trend, including low interest rates, low inflation, and a strong dollar. Ben Carlson pointed out that between 1970 and 2008, "international stocks and U.S. stocks were basically neck and neck", however since then U.S. stocks have outperformed international stocks. Ben Carlson thinks that investing in international stocks is the value play right now, given higher inflation, higher interest rates, and a weak dollar.

While U.S. stocks have driven outperformance globally over the past decade, there is potential for success in other regions of the world, and a diversified portfolio can provide a balance of risk and return. We have compiled a list of the 12 best cheap global stocks to buy now according to hedge funds which include Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (NYSE:TSM), General Motors Company (NYSE:GM), and Suncor Energy Inc. (NYSE:SU). Let's now discuss these stocks, among others, in detail below.