3 Deep-Value Stocks to Profit From

Sometimes opportunities in the stock market are where you least expect them. When a company sees a spike in share price on news of a buyout that ultimately fails, that stock is left for dead by most investors...

But you can actually find deep value here.

Let me explain...

After a series of stumbles throughout 2011, the board of directors at health care information provider WebMD (Nasdaq: WBMD) realized that the company may be better off in the hands of a larger digital information company.

An announcement at year's end helped to give fresh life to shares, as they quickly rebounded toward the $40 mark.

But few companies were interested in buying WebMD at that price, let alone at the 20-40% premium that shareholders typically expect in a buyout offer. The company's board announced that plans to sell the company were off the table in the near-term, sending shares quickly to fresh multi-year lows. Eventually, this company dropped off the front page, and its shares fell below $15 as investors moved on to other, timelier opportunities.

[More from StreetAuthority.com: ]

Yet it's worthwhile to keep tracking these companies after the crowd has moved on. For example, even in the absence of near-term buyout prospects, value investors started to move back in to WebMD, pushing shares up more than 15% in January. That was a wise move as WebMD recently announced stellar quarterly results, helping shares to post a heady 50% in the past three months to about $22.

As the WebMD example shows, companies need to seek a buyout when they have momentum, and they must have a realistic view of the value of their company. WebMD's board misread the tea leaves on both counts. But the company still plays a major role in the health care information sphere, so this stock, which remains more than 60% lower than where it stood in early 2011, has ample room to move higher as sales and profit trends improve.

Here are three other stocks that have recently pulled back as buyout talks have faded.

Digital Generation (Nasdaq: DGIT)
This company, which provides advertising management services to TV broadcasters and leading websites, has really vexed investors. After its shares swooned from above $40 in early 2010 to below $10 last spring, investors started to pay closer attention after media reports suggested industry rival Extreme Reach offered to buy Digital Generation for $20 a share. That deal might have eventually been met with anti-trust concerns, so Digital Generation's board allegedly rebuffed that offer, though it did hire Goldman Sachs to find other buyers.