3 Top Value Stocks to Buy in April

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Value stocks have become scarce thanks to the nine-year bull market, which has only recently started to show its age. Even a few months ago, it was tough to find anything that could legitimately be called a value stock.

The market is no longer moving in only one direction, and that means value investors should be on the lookout for opportunities. Where to start? How about Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL), Best Buy (NYSE: BBY), and Cypress Semiconductor (NASDAQ: CY)? Here's what you need to know.

Puzzle pieces spelling VALUE
Puzzle pieces spelling VALUE

Image source: Getty Images.

A surprisingly inexpensive tech giant

Steve Symington (Alphabet): Alphabet stock is trading at around $1,035 per share as of this writing, but don't let its four-figure price fool you into thinking it's expensive. The parent company of Google is expected to increase revenue nearly 21% this year (to around $134 billion), while 2018 earnings should climb by an even more impressive 38% to roughly $42 per share. Assuming Alphabet lives up to those expectations -- and it typically does, despite not offering quarterly financial guidance to Wall Street -- that would mean the stock trades at below 25 times forward earnings, an attractive premium given its growth. And that's not to mention the fact that Alphabet has nearly $101.9 billion in cash and marketable securities -- or roughly $147 per share -- on its balance sheet.

Of course, the vast majority of Alphabet's sales and profits come from advertising and digital product sales from its incredible core Google business, which boasts seven products with at least one billion monthly users each: Search, Gmail, Chrome, Maps, YouTube, Google Play, and Android.

But Alphabet also enjoys the promise of substantial incremental growth from its "other bets" segment, which houses a group of mostly early-stage businesses with massive long-term promise. Even still, these other bets are seeing their collective top lines grow quickly; sales from the segment soared 49% last year to $1.2 billion -- mostly from Nest connected home products, Fiber high-speed internet, and Verily life-sciences innovations. And while they simultaneously generated an operating loss of $3.4 billion last year (narrowed from $36 billion in 2016), if even one or two of these businesses can eventually grow to rival Google's existing core operations, they will prove money well spent.

This retailer is killing it

Tim Green (Best Buy): There are a lot of retail stocks trading at severely beaten-down valuations. Consumer electronics retailer Best Buy isn't one of them. The stock has soared since the company embarked on its turnaround in late 2012. Over the past five years, shares of Best Buy have more than tripled: