About to Buy Penny Stocks? Look at These 3 Companies First

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It can be tempting to plow your hard-earned cash into penny stocks. Because they trade at such low prices, even a small amount of money can buy hundreds or thousands of shares. And because they tend to be volatile, there's a chance you'll reap a quick and hefty profit.

But penny stocks are extremely risky. For every low-priced stock that rockets higher, there are many more that take investors on a roller-coaster ride to zero. Buying penny stocks is closer to gambling than investing.

If not penny stocks, then what? How about these three stocks, all of which represent portions of real businesses. Here's why you should take a look at Blue Apron (NYSE: APRN), Fitbit (NYSE: FIT), and Boston Beer (NYSE: SAM).

A Blue Apron meal kit.
A Blue Apron meal kit.

A Blue Apron meal kit. Image source: Blue Apron.

This $2 stock might have bottomed

Leo Sun (Blue Apron): Blue Apron, the top meal kit maker in America, went public at $10 last June. The stock subsequently tumbled to about $2 thanks to concerns about its slowing sales, lack of profitability, and competition from Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN), Walmart (NYSE: WMT), and other rivals.

Blue Apron's customer count fell 15% annually during the fourth quarter, compared to a 6% decline in the third quarter and 23% growth in the second quarter. Its average revenues per customer inched up 1% during the fourth quarter, but that anemic growth couldn't offset its loss of customers as its total revenues tumbled 13%.

Blue Apron remained deeply unprofitable, posting a net loss of $39 million and an adjusted EBITDA loss of $19.7 million last quarter. It laid off staff and switched CEOs, but downsizing in the face of escalating competition seems like a losing strategy.

However, Blue Apron also trades at just 0.4 times sales with a market cap of about $380 million. Therefore, it's still a lucrative buyout target for a larger retailer that wants to enter the meal kit market. 35% of its shares were being shorted as of April 10, so any positive news or buyout buzz could spark a short squeeze. I'm not saying Blue Apron is a safe long-term investment, but it probably has a better chance of doubling than most penny stocks.

Betting on a comeback

Tim Green (Fitbit): Fitbit is in quite a pickle. The company has been struggling with weak demand for its fitness trackers, and its first attempt at a proper smartwatch fell flat. Revenue has been tumbling since the holiday quarter of 2016, and shares of the wearables company have lost nearly 90% of their value since peaking in mid-2015. To call the stock beaten-down would be an understatement.