Wall Street is Bullish on These 3 Oversold Payment Stocks

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Despite the rear-view damage and considerable negative momentum, many Wall Street analysts remain upbeat on beaten-down payment plays. In this piece, I'll use TipRanks' Comparison Tool to look at three contrarian payment plays that the market has been too quick to give up on.

Payment stocks, especially those leveraging financial technologies, have been the canary in the coal mine over the past year, enduring considerable selling pressure well before the broader markets headed into a correction and, eventually, a bear market.

Still, it's hard not to want to do some buying after the pummeling they've taken this year. It's entirely possible that more than just a "mild" recession is baked into shares at this juncture. Though coming quarters will be nail-biters, I think there's real value to be had over the long run.

Block (SQ)

Block, formerly known as Square, used to be one of the most attractive fintech stocks in this market. The hype and euphoria got slightly out of hand in late 2020 and early 2021. Shares peaked in February 2021 before enduring a bumpy road and eventually crashing hard into the latter half of 2021. The first half of 2022 has just been salt in the wounds of Jack Dorsey's empire.

The firm behind Cash App and Square Point-of-Sale has been busy working on other initiatives behind the scenes. With Jack Dorsey giving the firm his full attention, there are many reasons to give SQ the benefit of the doubt, even as it moves through one of the roughest macro environments in recent memory.

RBC analysts recently noted that Block's second-quarter results will see the firm "walking on a fine line" as inflation's impact begins to weigh on spending habits. Other analysts have also been busy lowering their price targets in response to the stock's brutal 75% crash.

It's not just a questionable consumer that's a cause for concern for Block; the firm faces considerable disruption as rivals look to take a bigger bite out of the payments space. It seems that everybody wants to get into payments these days. If there are economic profits to be had, you can be sure it'll get the attention of the disruptive big-tech heavyweights.

With a robust Cash App ecosystem and a focused Jack Dorsey giving the firm his undivided attention, I'd not bet against Block stock, even as the fintech scene gets more crowded with time.

The stock trades at 2.5 times sales, which heavily discounts Dorsey's capabilities. I think the stock is severely oversold. Analysts agree, with a "Strong Buy" rating. The average Block price target of $123.67 implies 72.2% upside potential from current levels.