Down More Than 50%: These Buy-Rated Stocks Are Too Cheap to Ignore

While every market advisor will tell you never to try to ‘time’ the market, timing is still important for success. Investors need to buy into low prices, and to do that, they need to know when prices are low. This doesn’t necessarily mean low in absolute dollar terms, but low relative to a stock’s recent past performance.

In recognizing that lower price range, investors can turn to Wall Street’s pros for help. The analysts have been busy lately, picking out stocks that are in their lower price range and are primed for strong gains.

We’ve used the TipRanks database to look up two such stocks; each has fallen more than 50% over the past year, but each also boasts a Buy rating and solid upside potential, according to Wall Street’s analysts. Here are the details.

CS Disco, Inc. (LAW)

We will start with CS Disco, a software company that puts AI, cloud computing, and data analytics at the beck and call of the legal profession. CS Disco’s offerings include solutions for managing legal requests, strengthening the discovery process, reviewing documents, and building cases – and that’s just the beginning. The company serves law firms, corporations, and educational institutions with a scalable system geared toward legal matters.

While there is never a shortage of need for legal services in our highly litigious society, LAW shares have had a hard time over the past 12 months, diving ~76%. The share drop comes as the company has seen increasingly steep quarterly losses, and last summer management cut full-year 2022 revenue guidance by 11% at the midline and predicted a deeper than expected annual net loss for ’22.

Acknowledging the company’s headwinds, Canaccord's 5-star analyst David Hynes writes, “We’ve reached the point with Disco that the stock is simply too cheap for the potential of this business... this is a stock that has gone from the next Vertical Giant to problem child in a matter of 18 months. Some of this has been self-inflicted, namely that the model and team don’t provide enough forward-looking metrics to hang your hat on, but a lot of it to us feels like growing pains of a still sub-scale business."

"Whatever the culprit, with LAW shares now trading at roughly 1.0x EV/R on C2023E, we feel that it’s time to get more constructive on the stock... With improving growth should come restored confidence, and if that’s right, there’s nothing to say this shouldn’t be at least a 3-4x EV/R stock, which on current 2023 estimates would price LAW at $11-13,” Hynes added.

It should be unsurprising, then, that Hynes rates LAW a Buy. Not to mention his $12 price target puts the upside potential at ~55%. (To watch Hynes’ track record, click here)