3 Small-Cap Stocks Facing Headwinds

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3 Small-Cap Stocks Facing Headwinds

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Many small-cap stocks have limited Wall Street coverage, giving savvy investors the chance to act before everyone else catches on. But the flip side is that these businesses have increased downside risk because they lack the scale and staying power of their larger competitors.

These trade-offs can cause headaches for even the most seasoned professionals, which is why we started StockStory - to help you separate the good companies from the bad. Keeping that in mind, here are three small-cap stocks to avoid and some other investments you should consider instead.

Angi (ANGI)

Market Cap: $773.1 million

Created by IAC’s mergers of Angie’s List and HomeAdvisor, ANGI (NASDAQ: ANGI) operates the largest online marketplace for home services in the US.

Why Is ANGI Not Exciting?

  1. Intense competition is diverting traffic from its platform as its service requests fell by 24.1% annually

  2. Forecasted revenue decline of 8.7% for the upcoming 12 months implies demand will fall even further

  3. Highly competitive market means it’s on the never-ending treadmill of sales and marketing spend

Angi’s stock price of $16.11 implies a valuation ratio of 5.4x forward EV/EBITDA. To fully understand why you should be careful with ANGI, check out our full research report (it’s free).

Marqeta (MQ)

Market Cap: $2.18 billion

Founded by CEO Jason Gardner in 2009, Marqeta (NASDAQ:MQ) is an innovative card issuer that provides companies with the ability to issue and process virtual, physical, and tokenized credit and debit cards.

Why Do We Think Twice About MQ?

  1. Software offerings aren’t resonating in this new AI paradigm as its revenue declined by 2.8% annually over the last three years

  2. Steep infrastructure costs and weaker unit economics for a software company are reflected in its low gross margin of 69.4%

Marqeta is trading at $4.70 per share, or 3.8x forward price-to-sales. Check out our free in-depth research report to learn more about why MQ doesn’t pass our bar.

Diebold Nixdorf (DBD)

Market Cap: $1.79 billion

With roots dating back to 1859 and a presence in over 100 countries, Diebold Nixdorf (NYSE:DBD) provides automated self-service technology, software, and services that help banks and retailers digitize their customer transactions.

Why Does DBD Give Us Pause?

  1. Customers postponed purchases of its products and services this cycle as its revenue declined by 2.9% annually over the last five years

  2. Cash burn makes us question whether it can achieve sustainable long-term growth

  3. Negative returns on capital show that some of its growth strategies have backfired

At $47.98 per share, Diebold Nixdorf trades at 12.2x forward P/E. Read our free research report to see why you should think twice about including DBD in your portfolio, it’s free.