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13 NASDAQ Stocks with Lowest PE Ratios That May Not Be Value Traps

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In this piece, we will take a look at the 13 NASDAQ stocks with lowest PE ratios. If you want to skip our primer on one of the best performing U.S. stock exchanges this year, then take a look at 5 NASDAQ Stocks With Lowest PE Ratios.

If there's one thing that can be said with certainty about the stock market this year, it's that the NASDAQ index has defied expectations. Led by the surge in mega cap technology stocks, the NASDAQ 100 has delivered 45% returns in the first half of this year and 36.4% year to date after it pared off some of the gains during the third quarter.

The surge in the stocks has come as the market not only becomes quite optimistic about artificial intelligence but also because the U.S. economy has defied investor expectations of a recession and managed to grow during the second quarter. When it comes to AI, the NASDAQ is the index to invest in, as nearly all of the biggest beneficiaries of the new technology such as NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) and Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) are traded on the index.

And while Microsoft has an edge in AI due to its partnership with ChatGPT and the strength of the Azure platform, NVIDIA is a company that is indispensable. This is because NVIDIA's graphics processing units (GPUs) are the best of their kind in the industry and the company is also able to ensure a stable supply of the products to companies that are eager to make the AI transformation. These abilities have changed the narrative around NVIDIA this year, as the firm's earnings results for the second quarter of its fiscal year 2024 saw it report unbelievable revenue and earnings figures which blew analyst estimates not only out of the park but maybe even to space. For its Q2, NVIDIA reported $13.51 billion in revenue, which doubled its year ago figures of $6.7 billion and marked an 88% sequential growth during a time when the chip sector as a whole is undergoing a downturn due to inventory problems. At the same time, NVIDIA was quick to guide an equally strong financial scorecard for its current quarter as the firm expects to bring in $16 billion in revenue to mark 170% revenue growth - a figure that should assuage some nervousness in the market about the firm's ability to sustain the demand for its AI products.

The main reason that NVIDIA is now flying to new heights is its data center division - which includes revenue from the AI products. On this front, the company has partnered up with some of the enterprise computing industry's biggest players. This list includes big ticket and blue chip names such as ServiceNow, Inc. (NYSE:NOW), Accenture plc (NYSE:ACN), Snowflake Inc. (NYSE:SNOW), and VMware, Inc. (NYSE:VMW). NVIDIA's partnership with Accenture and ServiceNow aims to develop a unique platform that is capable of helping business users develop artificial intelligence models to upgrade their capabilities and boost their productivity. Its partnership with Snowflake follows similar principles since it aims to leverage NVIDIA's generative AI development framework called NeMo to enable business customers to use their own data to create large language models for purposes such as search databases and customer support.