11 Dirt Cheap Stocks To Buy

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In this piece, we will take a look at 11 dirt cheap stocks to buy. If you want to skip our coverage of the current economic environment, then take a look at 5 Dirt Cheap Stocks To Buy.

When compared to the optimism that surrounded stocks earlier this year after a strong run during the first half of 2023, the second half is relatively quieter. As opposed to the remainder of the Federal Reserve's interest rate hiking sector and artificial intelligence that dominated sentiment in H1, the second half is different. With weeks left until the Federal Reserve decides to raise interest rates by 25 basis points again or keep them at current levels, questions about the state of the economy and the duration of high interest rates are key questions that could determine where markets are heading moving forward.

Talking about valuation, one of the biggest stocks this year has been the graphics processing unit (GPU) designer NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA). NVIDIA's shares are up 238% year to date, effectively more than doubling any investment made earlier this year. Much of NVIDIA's valuation is based on the revenues that the market expects it to capture in an enterprise computing market shifting towards artificial intelligence. The market believes that NVIDIA can grow its earnings by quite a lot because of superior products for the budding AI market, but there are some quarters that speculate that the firm could be overvalued. Overvaluation is when the share price of a firm is significantly higher than its ability to earn revenue and generate a profit. Chip firms are typically valued at 54 times their earnings, and this has been pushed up by the recent downturn in the chip sector that has led to earnings drops as manufacturers struggle between balancing revenue and keeping costs low. NVIDIA's trailing P/E ratio is 117, helped by the massive increase in its share price.

The main measure through which a stock is evaluated for its value is the price to earnings ratio. This determines whether a stock is expensive or cheap, and profitable companies that have low share prices respective to their earnings are often considered cheap. However, these categorizations of value shift when a firm is analyzed and compared with its industry peers. Different industries have different price to earnings ratios, and a firm can be cheap when compared to its peers but expensive in relation to other companies in different sectors or industries. Companies with low P/E ratios typically operate in mature sectors or have mature business models that are unlikely to aggressively pursue market share. On the flip side, for companies in growing sectors such as technology and electric vehicles, the ratio is higher as investors start to factor in future growth potential in the current price.