12 Most Profitable Cheap Stocks To Buy

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In this piece, we will take a look at the 12 most profitable cheap stocks to buy. If you want to skip our coverage of the latest happenings in the renewable energy industry, then you can skip ahead to 5 Most Profitable Cheap Stocks To Buy.

As investors seek to exit 2023 with the hopes of interest rates coming down, the stock market of today is quite different from the one before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the 2022 mega inflation cycle, and the pre-coronavirus pandemic era. Interest rates in the U.S. now sit at record high levels for the 21st century, and they have naturally impacted the stock market and its valuations.

One of the most basic ways in which a stock, or even the entire market, is valued is the price to earnings ratio. This ratio measures the premium that investors pay for a firm over its ability to generate bottom line profit, and a higher ratio implies a higher valuation. So when rates are high, investors demand a higher premium for the opportunity cost of parking capital in interest paying securities, and naturally, this leads to depressed demand for stocks that ends up reducing their valuations.

For the prudent investor, this reduction can also present a buying opportunity if the bets are correctly timed. Lower valuations due to monetary policy are mostly unrelated to a firm's underlying fundamentals. Consequently, there is potential for them to 'self correct' should the economic environment improve to provide investors with an opportunity to book a profit.

This became quite clear in December 2023 after the latest comments by Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell. The central bank has raised interest rates to 5.25%, and with the year coming to a close, anything that anyone can talk about is when the rates will start to drop. Well, Mr. Powell's latest statements warned against the perils of keeping rates too high for too long, and as a result, stock markets soared across the board. For the week ending on December 15th, the S&P 500 gained 2.5%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) soared by 2.9%, and the NASDAQ Composite posted 2.8% in returns as valuations started to adjust due to hopes of lower interest rates.

In fact, the Fed's decision to keep rates unchanged was quite good for the S&P 500 as the flagship benchmark stock index went on to touch a 23 week high of 4738 points. This came right when billions of dollars poured into equity funds as investors were in no mood to wait and miss out on returns after confidence in a dovish Fed grew. During the week, $2 billion made its way into U.S. equity funds, with technology and high growth stocks leading the charge.