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2 Super Growth Stocks Down 34% and 61% to Buy on the Dip

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Generally speaking, investors are better off not waiting for market dips.

  • However, even the best stocks on the market eventually face some turbulence.

  • I'm happy to buy shares of these top-tier businesses on the dip.

While I don't typically wait for a stock to dip in price to buy it, it can be an excellent opportunity to add to a holding -- provided my original investment thesis remains intact.

Following the market's recent sell-off, many of my favorite stocks have dropped significantly. However, I'd argue there's nothing existentially wrong with most of these businesses. Many of these stocks were priced for perfection by the market and failed to meet the lofty expectations that analysts had hoped for. They're far from broken businesses.

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Today, I'll examine two examples of businesses facing this phenomenon and explain why these two growth stocks appear to be super buy-the-dip candidates.

1. The Trade Desk

The Trade Desk (NASDAQ: TTD) is a data-driven digital platform for ad buyers, whether they are brands themselves or their publishers.

The Trade Desk's leading platform operates independently on the buy-side -- as opposed to the walled gardens of Alphabet, Meta Platforms, and Amazon -- granting it a level of subjectivity its mega peers can't match. These behemoths tend to keep their precious data in-house, limiting transparency for advertisers trying to maximize their marketing effectiveness.

Powered by this independence and subjectivity, The Trade Desk has become an 18-bagger in the 10 years since it went public. What makes this stock's performance even more incredible is that these results include The Trade Desk's 61% pullback from its highs over the last year.

Typically, dramatic sell-offs like this hit struggling businesses or companies that have lost their grip on a leadership position. However, in The Trade Desk's case -- and the case of the other stock in this article -- the drop stems from not being able to live up to a lofty valuation that demanded perfect results.

Over the last decade, the company has traded at an average of 82 times free cash flow (FCF). This valuation is nearly three times the average of the S&P 500 over the same time. So when The Trade Desk reported quarterly earnings that fell short of management's internal guidance for the first time in 33 quarters, its shares were swiftly punished.