3 Top Stocks Wall Street Is Overlooking

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Like it or not, the investing world tends to listen closely to what analysts on Wall Street have to say about any given stock. But for astute investors who are able to recognize opportunities where Wall Street doesn't, the financial reward can be staggering.

So we asked three top Motley Fool contributors to each find a stock that they believe Wall Street is overlooking. Read on to learn why they like Pandora Media (NYSE: P), Kinder Morgan (NYSE: KMI), and Bitauto Holdings (NYSE: BITA).

Man in suit and tie looking through binoculars with a cityscape in the background
Man in suit and tie looking through binoculars with a cityscape in the background

Image source: Getty Images.

Pandora could be poised for a quarterly beat

Steve Symington (Pandora Media): Shares of Pandora Media fell hard in February after the music-streaming leader delivered strong quarterly results but followed with disappointing forward guidance. And on the eve of Pandora's first-quarter 2018 report this Thursday after the market closes, I'm going out on a limb to say that investors could do very well by betting its long-term story remains intact.

To be clear, the midpoint of Pandora's Q1 guidance calls for modest 5% year-over-year revenue growth, primarily as the company expects a continuation of ad-revenue headwinds similar to those it has endured since the second half of last year.

But according to Pandora's new CEO -- who quickly began implementing a number of changes to reinvigorate growth ranging from investments in Pandora's ad tech, marketing, distribution partnerships, and new content launches -- most of their new growth initiatives are "still in early stages, and their impact will build over the course of 2018."

There is already solid growth in paid subscribers -- the number of listeners opting for Pandora Plus and Pandora Premium increased 25% year over year last quarter, driving a 63% increase in subscription revenue. So, I think there's plenty of room for an upside surprise when Pandora's results hit the wires.

A jumping dividend

John Bromels (Kinder Morgan): You'd think Wall Street would pay attention to the world's largest pipeline owner, Kinder Morgan, especially after the company announced a stellar Q1 2017 and boosted its dividend by 60% -- yes, you read that right: 60%!

But old habits die hard, and despite a small bump the day Q1 earnings were announced, Kinder Morgan's shares have been steadily declining since. This is nothing new: Wall Street has been bearish on the company since management announced a -- probably necessary -- quarterly dividend cut from $0.51/share to $0.125/share in 2015. The price is still languishing at near-historic lows, which seems odd because the company's outlook is strong.