3 Growth Stocks Down 33% to Buy Right Now

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Target is losing market share, but a fresh dividend hike can send the right message as it works on a turnaround.

  • Celsius stock is one of the best market performers of 2025, but it's also one of the worst over the past 12 months.

  • Freshpet is seeing its business slow this year, but the stock could be cooler than one of its branded retail store fridges.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Target ›

The market may be rallying, but not every stock is going along for the ride. There are plenty of quality stocks that are still trading a lot lower than they were a year ago.

They may not be at their best right now. You don't shed a third of your value in an otherwise buoyant past 12 months without some flaws. However, I think that Target (NYSE: TGT), Celsius Holdings (NASDAQ: CELH), and Freshpet (NASDAQ: FRPT) are three stocks that you might want to consider buying right now.

Yes, they are trading at least 33% lower over the past year (and a lot lower than their all-time highs). They still have some compelling reasons to emerge out of the market's penalty box. I am a shareholder in all three companies. Let's take a closer look.

1. Target: Down 33%

It's been a rough few quarters for Target. Shares of the "cheap chic" mass-market retailer have gotten even cheaper, but that's largely because the concept itself is no longer chic. Store comps have turned negative, and the chain is coming off back-to-back quarters of declining net sales.

The stock has shed a third of its value over the past year, pushing its yield to a beefy 4.6%. That payout could inch higher this week even if the shares stand still, because Target has boosted its dividend for 53 consecutive years. It has announced its hikes between June 9 and 15 in the past several years. If it's going to stretch its Dividend King streak to 54 years, it may very well happen later this week.

One can argue that Target has bigger things to worry about than to keep sending more money back to its shareholders. However, it has more than enough wiggle room to dig a little deeper into its pockets. It's currently paying out less than 50% of its trailing earnings in quarterly dividends. Guidance it provided last week calls for adjusted earnings per share between $7 and $9 this year, translating into a payout ratio between 50% and 64%.

Someone surprised by dollar bills falling from above.
Image source: Getty Images.

Target has some work to do to win its customers back. It's a retailer that not only managed to become political -- not typically the best move when you're literally a mass-market concept -- but also somehow angered both sides of the aisle.