Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.

Is Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) the Most Undervalued Growth Stock to Buy Now?

In This Article:

We recently published a list of 10 Most Undervalued Growth Stocks to Buy Now. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMD) stands against other most undervalued growth stocks to buy now.

Growth stocks are companies that grow their revenues and earnings at a faster rate than the overall market does. To identify the true growth stocks, we believe it is important to use a high enough benchmark over a long enough period. In this case, we define growth stocks as companies that managed to achieve a 5-year revenue compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of at least 20%. It is obvious that all else equal, investors would prefer growth stocks, but the truth is that their high valuations and perceived expensiveness may often make them less attractive. It is not rare that high-growth companies end up underperforming simply because their initially high forward P/E ratio gradually contracts over time, partially or entirely offsetting the contribution of high earnings growth. So, the ultimate grail of investing consists in identifying undervalued growth stocks that would continue to grow rapidly and at the same time maintain or even expand their trading multiple.

READ ALSO: 10 Best Undervalued Stocks to Buy According to Billionaires

The growth factor has underperformed year-to-date as the entire US stock market has retracted by more than 15% since its early 2025 highs. The growth stocks performed worse than the market because capital flows to safety assets such as defensive value stocks and gold; the latter is up more than 30% this year, and its price returns actually exceed those of the entire US stock market over the last 10 years. Such situations are rare, and the truth is, by the time growth stocks become cheap enough, many retail investors are no longer willing to buy. This is exactly what’s happening now, as the CNN Fear & Greed index shows a value of 20/100, showcasing an “Extreme Fear” in the markets. This public fear is amplified by the tariff turmoil, especially as the broader market is showing a “Death Cross” on the technical charts. Similar to Warren Buffett’s teachings to be greedy when others are fearful, we maintain our optimistic stance for the long-term financial and economic health of the US and its stock market.

The emergence of the “Death Cross” signal on the technical chart turns out to be not as scary as perceived by the masses – empirical research shows that the broader market is actually expected to post a positive return of 1% over the 50 days, following the crossing of the 50 daily simple moving average below the 200 daily one, which already occurred on April 11. We don’t claim that history will repeat itself this time; we want to illustrate that this widely discussed and feared event does not have much substance behind it.