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Five of the Most Oversold Stocks to Consider for 2019
The Dow Jones opened 418 points higher on Monday. The NASDAQ is up 123. The S&P 500 is rocketing higher by 37. All as President Trump and China President Xi Jinping put the trade war on hold for the next 90 days.
There's now hope the Dow Jones can regain most of what it lost since October 2018, and rally back to 27,000, as long as the trade war fears begin to dwindle.
This gives us an opportunity to buy into some of the most severely oversold stocks on market, including those in the badly damaged tech sector.
Five of our favorite opportunities include:
Opportunity No. 1 – Extreme Networks (EXTR)
EXTR for example took a nasty dive this year along with most of the tech sector, but it’s now become severely undervalued and oversold. Analysts strongly believe company earnings could increase by more than 40% in 2019. Yet, the stock trades at just 8x forward estimates. The company even started on a $60 million buyback program to take advantage of its low share cost.
Opportunity No. 2 – Advanced Micro Devices (AMD)
In our opinion, after the tech rout, stocks like AMD are considerably oversold. With patience, we believe the stock could challenge $34 a share again, near-term. Not long ago, Bank of America Merrill Lynch is getting more bullish on the stock, too.
Lee Gettess is a top trader who is excited to bring you his video newsletter. Each week, Lee will share his predictions on what he anticipates from the bond and S&P markets.
The breakout is a classical bullish pattern that occurs when the number and strength of the buyers overwhelms the sellers. As the name suggests, breakouts occur when prices move away from an area where they have been consolidating for a period of time. The corresponding bearish pattern is typically known as the breakdown. In the breakout, the accumulation of shares exceeds the distribution and share values rise. The breakout is normally accomplished on a price gap when share values leave a space on the chart which is often not filled. The unfilled gap on a chart is known as a breakaway gap.
The breakout is the simplest and most important pattern for the beginning chartist to know. By definition, a rising stock must take out its high. Buying the breakout, therefore, is one of the strongest possible buys a technical analyst can make. Unfortunately, the strategy is fraught with danger since one is buying a new high amid a flurry of buying activity. The risk is that the breakout proves false and the market then subsequently trades back down into the so-called consolidation area between the resistance and support. When the pattern fails in this fashion, this is known as a false breakout. For the buyer of the breakout, this failure means trouble. The buyer, who buys a breakout, may have just purchased near the top of the move. The failure of the move suggests the odds now favor prices trending lower. The best way to deal with the scenario is to immediately sell the position at a loss.
The Economic Calendar has a few interesting events worth discussing. Let’s talk about three events: Monday’s New Vehicle Sales, Thursday’s OPEC Meeting and Friday’s Non-Farm Payroll Report (NFP).
Throughout the day on Monday, the automobile industry releases their monthly sales figures (as an annualized number). Because these sales figures are released throughout the day, it’s not as tradable as an event as if the numbers all came at once. But, because of General Motors (GM) announcing five plant closings last week, this week’s sales figures will be more widely followed.
The price of oil has been a somewhat steady slide lower. The world is waiting to see if these Oil producing countries will cut back on production.
Finally the big event for the week is Friday’s Non-Farm Payroll Report (NFP) release. The “Jobs” number as this report is often known as, may give signals as to whether or not the Federal Reserve (the “Fed”) will slow down their raising of short-term interest rates. Understand the Fed is expected to raise rates two weeks later for a final time this year, but they have been projecting three more rate increases in 2019.
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