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3 Great Stocks You Can Buy on Sale

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There are quite a few ways to value the stock market, but the cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings (CAPE) ratio is among the most popular. It takes the average earnings of the S&P 500 from the last decade and adjusts them for inflation. Right now, the index boasts a CAPE ratio of 33, which is more expensive than any other time in history save for the run-up to the Dot Com bubble burst. While there's always room for nuance when comparing one period of time to another, there's no getting around the fact that today's stock market is historically expensive.

That doesn't mean individual investors can't find stocks on the cheap, however. Some stocks are being unfairly dragged down by industry-specific concerns, while others have been caught in the crossfire of rising global trade tensions despite being relatively insulated against downside. That appears to be the case with construction material specialist Owens Corning (NYSE: OC), lithium producer Albemarle (NYSE: ALB), and water products leader A.O. Smith (NYSE: AOS). Here are three stocks on sale that you can buy now.

A worker installing asphalt shingles on a roof.
A worker installing asphalt shingles on a roof.

Image source: Getty Images.

A building materials stock down on its luck

Owens Corning just can't seem to catch a break this year. The company's shares are down 31% year-to-date after yet another one-day collapse following the release of second-quarter 2018 earnings results. But the business actually turned in a relatively solid performance in the quarter: Revenue grew 14% compared to the year-ago period, while lower tax expenses boosted net income 26% in that span.

In fact, the company's only "problem" is that Wall Street analysts didn't factor rising material costs into their expectations for earnings. Consider that Owens Corning missed revenue expectations by less than 2%, but missed EPS expectations by 25%. In other words, the stock's performance this year has more to do with broken spreadsheet models than the performance of the real-world business.

Management isn't flinching. In the second half of 2018 it expects strong pricing to offset the headwinds presented by higher material costs, resulting in full-year 2018 earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) in the neighborhood of $950 million. That means nearly two-thirds of EBIT for the year is expected to be generated in the back half of the year. Furthermore, considering trailing 12-month operating cash flow sits at $930 million -- near a 10-year high, and relatively stable over the last two years -- and the company expects healthy free cash flow generation in 2018, investors could be staring at a great long-term opportunity here.