2 Stocks Down 31% and 26% to Buy Right Now

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On the heels of an incredible rally, stocks are off to a strong start in 2025. After surging 23.3% across 2024's trading, the S&P 500 index rose roughly 1.2% early in this year's trading before flattening as of Tuesday's market close. Market darlings like Nvidia hit new valuation highs this week, and investors are looking to potentially explosive categories including quantum computing and robotics as "next big thing" contenders that could power future rallies.

While buying shares in top technology players with high-flying valuations could still have big payoffs, investors could wind up missing out if they ignore tech stocks that have seen their valuations slip despite the bullish market backdrop. With that in mind, read on to see why two Fool.com contributors think that underperforming stocks Dell Technologies (NYSE: DELL) and Trimble (NASDAQ: TRMB) are poised to bounce back and deliver big wins for investors.

Dell can still score big wins with AI

Keith Noonan (Dell Technologies): The market for artificial intelligence (AI) servers is hot right now and has plenty of room for long-term expansion. Dell has a strong position in the space, and its opportunities in the category could help power growth that translates into strong gains for shareholders. With the stock price still down 31% from its high, investors who take a buy-and-hold approach look poised to see strong performance from the company.

Dell stock fell at the end of November after the company reported mixed third-quarter results. The company posted earnings of $2.15 per share on sales of $24.4 billion. Meanwhile, the average analyst estimate had called for the business to post adjusted per-share earnings of $2.06 on sales of $24.7 billion.

The tech company's earnings for the period came in much better than anticipated, but its profits fell significantly short of Wall Street expectations. Despite the post-earnings sell-off stemming from the sales miss, there are actually good reasons to think that Dell will significantly outperform the broader market over the next five years. And one catalyst in particular looks poised to power strong performance for the stock.

Revenue for the company's infrastructure solutions group segment increased 34% year over year to hit $11.4 billion. Within the category, revenue for the servers and networking products subsidiary increased 58% year over year to hit $7.4 billion.

Thanks to rapid growth for its server products, Dell's infrastructure solutions group segment should soon account for the majority of overall revenue. With the segment standing as the company's fastest-growing by far, this positions the business's overall revenue to begin accelerating at a far more impressive clip. And with the company's earnings last quarter coming in far better than anticipated, Dell is showing that it can manage costs effectively and book strong profits as it scales its AI server business.