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3 Stocks That Are Absurdly Cheap Right Now

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The trade war, tariffs, and other macro uncertainties caused many investors to dump stocks and buy lower-risk assets like bonds over the past year. However, that widespread fear has reduced the valuations of many stocks to historical lows.

Let's examine three stocks that fit that description -- China Mobile (NYSE: CHL), Momo (NASDAQ: MOMO), and HP (NYSE: HPQ) -- and why they're absurdly cheap relative to their long-term growth potential.

A bull figurine in front of a stock chart.
A bull figurine in front of a stock chart.

Image source: Getty Images.

China's top telco

China Mobile is the largest state-backed telco in China. Its wireless customer base grew 3% annually to 936.8 million in July, and 79% of those customers were 4G subscribers, compared to 75% a year earlier. Its number of wireline customers also grew 29% annually to 178 million in July.

China Mobile's operating revenue rose 2% last year. Its net profit, buoyed by the IPO of China Tower last August, rose 3%. Those growth rates look solid, and the stock pays a forward yield of nearly 5% and trades at less than ten times earnings.

Yet investors are avoiding China Mobile, for four reasons. First, Chinese regulators forced China Mobile and its rivals to lower their wireless fees, eliminate data roaming charges, and provide faster wireline connections at lower prices. Second, China Mobile ramped up its spending on 5G networks -- so its operating expenses rose as its revenue growth waned.

Third, the trade war raised questions about China Mobile's ability to use American components in the future and killed its proposed expansion into the U.S. market. Lastly, the escalating protests in Hong Kong slammed most stocks on the city's exchange, including China Mobile.

Those headwinds are all causing near-term pain for China Mobile, but the telco is still steadily growing and remains one of the safest long-term plays on the Chinese market.

The "Tinders of China"

Chinese tech company Momo owns two major apps: Its namesake app, which generates most of its revenue, is a social platform that lets users find each other and watch live video broadcasts. Its smaller app, Tantan, is a clone of Tinder.

Momo generates most of its revenue from paid subscriptions (which offer premium search features), virtual gifts for live video streamers, and ads. However, the stock tumbled earlier this year when Chinese regulators ordered the temporary removal of Tantan from Chinese app stores, Apple suspended Tantan's in-app payments, and Momo suspended news feed posts for both Momo and Tantan for an internal review.

A couple having a date in a coffee shop.
A couple having a date in a coffee shop.

Image source: Getty Images.