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3 Underrated Warren Buffett Stocks That Are Smart Buys Right Now

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If you had invested $10,000 in Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B) 40 years ago, your investment would be worth $4.42 million today. Those massive gains were driven by Buffett's big bets on companies like Coca-Cola, Bank of America, American Express, and Apple -- and investors still follow his biggest trades closely today.

But with dozens of stocks in Berkshire's portfolio, it can be easy to overlook some of Buffett's smaller and lesser-known positions. Let's focus on three of those underrated plays -- and why they might be good long-term plays for patient investors.

Adult and two children putting coins in piggy bank.
Image source: Getty Images.

1. A leading maker of PCs and printers

Berkshire Hathaway took an 11% stake in HP (NYSE: HPQ), one of the world's top producers of PCs and printers, in April 2022. Berkshire subsequently reduced its stake to about 5% as HP struggled to stabilize its core businesses.

However, HP still looks very cheap at ( times forward earnings, and it pays an attractive forward dividend yield of 3.7%. Therefore, investors who are willing to look past its near-term slowdown might be well-rewarded over the next few years.

HP's revenue and adjusted earnings per share (EPS) declined 1% and 7%, respectively, in fiscal 2022 (which ended in October 2022) as the sluggish post-pandemic market, inflation, rising interest rates, and other macro headwinds curbed its sales of new PCs and printers to individuals and businesses. In fiscal 2023, its revenue and adjusted EPS fell 15% and 18%, respectively.

Those declines were steep, but most chipmakers expect the PC market to stabilize and recover this year. As that market warms up again, HP continues to cut costs and streamline its business by laying off employees and simplifying its lineup of PCs. Analysts expect its revenue and adjusted EPS to grow 2% and 5%, respectively, in fiscal 2024 -- and accelerate slightly in fiscal 2025. HP's growth rates might seem sluggish, but it could still be a great deep value play at these levels.

2. A growing cloud software company

When Snowflake (NYSE: SNOW), a leading provider of cloud-based data warehouse services, went public in September 2020, Berkshire Hathaway surprised a lot of investors by scooping up 2% of its IPO shares. Warren Buffett had traditionally avoided unprofitable hypergrowth tech companies throughout most of his career.

However, Snowflake stood out because it was carving out a defensible niche with its flexible data warehousing services -- which aggregate and clean up data across a wide range of computing platforms so they can be easily fed to third-party applications. That "silo busting" approach made it easier for companies to make data-driven decisions.