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3 Growth Stocks Down 30% or More to Buy Right Now

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The S&P 500 is up 81% over the last five years and is sitting at an all-time high as of this writing. In short, it's hard to find quality growth stocks that aren't hitting new highs along with the market. If a stock is down, there's probably a reason.

There are reasons why growth stocks such as Five Below (NASDAQ: FIVE), The Trade Desk (NASDAQ: TTD), and e.l.f. Beauty (NYSE: ELF) are down instead of up. But there's also reason to believe that all three can push past the things that investors are worried about.

1. Five Below

No one should question whether Five Below can grow revenue -- it can. Through the first three quarters of its fiscal 2024 -- the nine months ended Nov. 2 -- the company's net sales were up 12% from the comparable period of fiscal 2023. This growth is thanks to the 205 new stores that it's opened year to date. It has over 1,700 locations now, and management has said that it expects to open roughly 1,800 more by 2030. This is clearly a growth stock.

More questionable is whether Five Below can deliver attractive financial results in a changing economic landscape. The company made its mark by selling items at $5 or cheaper, which is increasingly difficult as inflation continues to be an issue. Moreover, 40% of its products in fiscal 2023 were sourced from international vendors, which could pose a problem with escalating trade tensions.

The thing is, I believe the stock price for Five Below already reflects the challenges. Management believes it will report full-year earnings per share (EPS) of $4.34 to $4.52, which means it trades at about 20 times those earnings estimates. That's inexpensive for a business growing at a double-digit rate.

Five Below also has a strong balance sheet that's ready to endure the challenges. It has over $200 million in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments, and it doesn't have any debt. In short, if it needs to adjust, it has the means to do so. And because of this, it seems likely to me that the company will figure out how to keep its business optimized for long-term profits, which will help the stock recover in due time from its greater-than-50% drop from 52-week highs.

2. The Trade Desk

The Trade Desk just did something unprecedented: It underperformed its own financial guidance. For the fourth quarter of 2024, management had guided for revenue of at least $756 million. But it only generated Q4 revenue of $741 million. And due to this earnings miss, the stock is now down more than 40% from its high -- its fourth largest pullback since it went public almost nine years ago.