7 F-Rated Growth Stocks to Avoid Right Now: June 2024

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When does a growth stock become one of the top growth stocks to avoid?

It sounds like the beginning of a riddle or a bad joke, but the answer is obvious – it’s when the stock is deceptive and tricks you into believing that it can be a good buy. You look at the Portfolio Grader and get interested because a stock has a good grade specifically for growth, but then realize that it still has an “F” rating overall.

How can that happen?

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The Portfolio Grader rates stocks based on earnings history, growth, analyst sentiment and momentum. The growth grade in particular is a popular metric for finding growth stocks to avoid.

But it’s also important to see why a company is getting a good growth grade. Because sometimes, looking at a single factor like growth can be misleading and can’t make up for the company’s deficiencies in other areas.

Today, we’re going to look at several companies that have good growth grades, and we’ll investigate why that’s happening in each case. But then we’ll pull back the curtain, look at the fuller picture, and explore why these growth stocks to avoid are still getting “F” grades overall.

In the end, an exercise like this is a good reminder to not rely on any one metric when considering your stock portfolio. Growth is highly desirable, but the growth stocks to avoid on this list can easily drag your portfolio into the gutter.

Virgin Galactic (SPCE)

Virgin Galactic (SPCE) billboard on the New York Stock Exchange, across from the Fearless Girl statue. aerospace stocks
Virgin Galactic (SPCE) billboard on the New York Stock Exchange, across from the Fearless Girl statue. aerospace stocks

Source: Tun Pichitanon / Shutterstock.com

It makes sense to jump right into one of the growth stocks to avoid that’s been a huge disappointment – and has cost plenty of investors a lot of money along the way.

Virgin Galactic (NYSE:SPCE) made its name in the billionaire space race as founder Richard Branson competed with SpaceX and Blue Orgin to see which would be the first to make it into space with a civilian crew.

You may remember that Virgin Galactic won that race, as it shot Branson into suborbital flight just a few days before Jeff Bezos did the same on a Blue Orgin rocket.

But honestly, that’s the high point for this company. Space tourism doesn’t feel any closer today than it did several years ago, and few people have the several hundred thousand dollars it takes to make the trip, even if the flights become a reality.

Virgin Galactic has burned through more than $1 billion in the last two years and rewarded investors with a 93% fall in stock price. SPCE recently completed a 1-for-20 reverse stock split to push the price back over the Nasdaq threshold and maintain listing compliance, but the reality is that this is a bad stock and a weak company.