It's Time to Get Greedy With These Growth Stocks

In This Article:

Investors looking to succeed in investing have no better example than legendary Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK-A) (NYSE: BRK-B) CEO Warren Buffett. Since 1965, his company has generated compounded annual gains of more than 20%, increasing by the end of 2018 a whopping 2,472,627%.

One particularly useful piece of advice from the Oracle of Omaha is this gem:

I will tell you how to become rich. Close the doors. Be fearful when others are greedy. Be greedy when others are fearful.

Every company goes though rough patches, leaving investors fearing for the worst, when perhaps they should be seeing an opportunity to get greedy. With that in mind, let's look at three growth companies facing short-term challenges that might represent compelling opportunities: NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA), Activision Blizzard (NASDAQ: ATVI), and IPG Photonics (NASDAQ: IPGP).

Well dressed man looks at upward graph superimposed on window viewing cityscape at night.
Well dressed man looks at upward graph superimposed on window viewing cityscape at night.

Image source: Getty Images.

A chip off the old block

NVIDIA had been riding high, experiencing a trifecta of growth catalysts: strong demand for its graphics processing units (GPUs) from gamers, increasing adoption for data centers and artificial intelligence, and significant demand generated by those mining cryptocurrency -- all contributing to the stock's multi-year run. The bottom dropped out late last year when growth in two of sources seemed to dry up. The cryptocurrency bubble burst, reducing demand for GPUs and leaving excess inventory in the channel. Then, weaker demand from its booming data center segment caused a year-over-year decline of 10% -- after years of double- and even triple-digit gains in the segment.

This one-two punch caused revenue to fall 31% and 24% year over year, respectively, in the two most recent quarters. This dismal performance sent investors running for the exit, and the stock shed more than half its value.

All is not lost, however. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang said on a recent conference call, "The entire reason for [the] Q4 and Q1 [shortfall] is attributed to oversupply in the channel as a result of cryptocurrency." Once this excess inventory is cleared out, the company expects GPU sales to return to "normal levels for gaming." NVIDIA also addressed the "pause" in data center spending, explaining that hyperscale customers bought excess supply last year. The company expects the situation to persist into the second quarter but expects the second half to be "sizably larger" than the first, with the data center segment returning to growth.

In all, these challenges should be short-lived, and NVIDIA stock should soon resume its upward trajectory.