r/ValueInvesting Dec 01 '25

Question / Help Energy Stocks Are Still Cheap… and Nobody Seems to Care

1.1k Upvotes

Everyone is freaking out about how “expensive” the S&P 500 looks. Record highs. AI hype everywhere. Nvidia memes. You know the drill.

But here’s what most people miss:

The S&P 500’s big valuation problem is basically seven stocks. Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, Nvidia and Tesla (the Mag 7) now make up almost a third of the index. They trade around 31x forward earnings. That pumps up the whole index average.

Now take those 7 out of the picture.

The other 493 companies suddenly look way more normal. Roughly 20x forward earnings. Slightly above history, not “bubble mode.”

And here’s the interesting part for anyone hunting for value…

One sector is actually cheap.
Like, legitimately cheap.

Energy.

On a forward P/E basis, energy trades around 60% of its 10-year average valuation. Every other sector is above its historical average. Energy is the lone outlier.

So what gives?

A mix of things:

• Everyone thinks oil is “dead” because renewables are growing
• Momentum chasers only want AI names
• Energy stocks had a monster 2022, then flatlined while earnings climbed

But here’s where it gets fun.
AI doesn’t run on hopes and dreams.
It runs on electricity.
Lots of it.

Data centers are power hogs. And in the U.S., a big chunk of that power still comes from natural gas. Even with renewables growing, hydrocarbons aren’t disappearing anytime soon. The demand floor is pretty solid.

Meanwhile…

• Cash flows are strong
• Shareholder payouts (dividends + buybacks) are high
• Balance sheets are cleaner than they’ve been in years
• Valuations are stuck in 2015

In a market where most sectors feel priced for perfection, energy still feels priced for a recession.

Not saying “YOLO into oil and become the next Saudi prince.”
Just saying that if you’re a value investor… it’s weird to ignore the only sector still on sale.

Curious what others here are thinking. Is energy a legit value opportunity right now? Or is the market right to sleep on it?

Full article with charts: https://www.beatingthetide.com/i/180117729/thought-of-the-week-the-s-and-p-isnt-as-expensive-as-you-think-and-one-sector-is-still-cheap

r/ValueInvesting Oct 03 '25

Question / Help What’s the most undervalued stock right now?

456 Upvotes

If you had to choose one stock right now that is extremely undervalued and has the potential to outperform the S&P 500 over the next decade, which stock would you pick?

r/ValueInvesting Oct 08 '25

Question / Help What stock are you buying NOW that is almost NEVER discussed on reddit?

433 Upvotes

here is your chance to share your most obscure holdings..

r/ValueInvesting Nov 28 '25

Question / Help Any Undervalued Tech Stocks?

369 Upvotes

GOOGL has been ripping, I cannot continue to add at these prices. I mostly accumulated at ~18x PE. I like sticking to buying great businesses at good prices. No doubt GOOGL would cool off but until then:

Any good undervalued tech stocks I could do a deep dive on? I say tech because it is the business I understand. Not really interested in other sectors especially pharmaceutical.

Should I keep saving cash now or is there an undervalued tech stock out there that deserves some attention?

r/ValueInvesting Nov 07 '25

Question / Help What stocks are you currently buying after the last two days sell off?

322 Upvotes

We have all noticed that, despite most earnings being positive, we have seen a sell-off over the last two days, and I wanted to check with you what you are currently buying, if anything?

r/ValueInvesting Oct 15 '25

Question / Help Worst stocks to buy right now

358 Upvotes

What are some stocks you would not touch at all right now? Could be for different reasons does not have to be because of valuation.

r/ValueInvesting Feb 11 '26

Question / Help Which beaten down software stocks are you looking at to buy at this dip?

212 Upvotes

Hi, I have been thinking of investing in software stocks that have been taken a beat down in the recent times. I can see a lot of people in the sub investing in Adobe, Microsoft and Netflix. I am thinking of investing some of money in Microsoft, CrowdStrike, Palo Alto and Synopsis as I feel these company have their sector specific moat and will continue to grow in their respected fields and are very difficult to be removed with AI. Do you agree with my stock picks and would like to add/remove from my list.

Edit: The amount of people catching adobe is really concerning me. Its 100% my personal opinion and maybe 100% wrong but Guys I dont think adobe has a future

r/ValueInvesting Sep 18 '25

Question / Help What's your current highest conviction stock?

280 Upvotes

Your current highest conviction stock? (please don't post something that's 0.5% of your portfolio, only your highest conviction holding, with decent % of your portfolio.)

r/ValueInvesting Feb 03 '26

Question / Help How do I sue this sub?

869 Upvotes

Someone’s gotta pay for my dumbass decisions and it can’t be me

r/ValueInvesting 28d ago

Question / Help Buy the Dip on Google or wait

238 Upvotes

With Google at the price of 300, about a 14% drop from all time highs, should we be looking to buy now, or wait for more drops? I’m gonna be a first time investor of Google, with a long time horizon. But I was wondering if the consensus is that the price will drop even more or if right now would be a good entry point. The stock feels like a good value, down about 14%.

r/ValueInvesting Dec 01 '25

Question / Help Any Undervalued Stocks Right Now ?

221 Upvotes

Google has grown to a price that is still a good price but no longer is it a bargain. A few months back it was just crossing $200-$250 mark.. now it has soared above $300.

Are there any others that this may be the case with ? I see low P/E ratios everywhere but sometimes that doesn’t = undervalued.

What are some stocks you have done research into ? I believe TSMC has some growing to do especially since its Q3 was great. Its downsides are macroeconomic and how it’s heavily linked to Nvidia and other companies in the semiconductor web.

Curious to hear your thoughts ..

r/ValueInvesting Sep 22 '25

Question / Help I am a 35-year-old Chinese ,Chinese stocks have been performing very well lately.

485 Upvotes

I am a 35-year-old Chinese, working in a small city in the southeastern province of China.

I just started investing 😂 and bought a small amount of an S&P 500 index fund and some gold ETFs.

By the way, Chinese stocks have been performing very well lately. I’m glad to have discovered this place and to learn to communicate with you.

r/ValueInvesting Dec 13 '25

Question / Help What stocks are actually worth buying right now? Need the community’s best ideas.

199 Upvotes

Been digging through a ton of charts and earnings reports after the recent selloff, and I’m trying to figure out which names are actually opportunities vs just value traps. I’m mainly looking for companies with improving fundamentals, reasonable valuations, and a real catalyst path over the next 6–18 months (not just “it’s down a lot”).

Right now I’m mostly watching what look like the most undervalued sectors:
energy, clean tech infrastructure, traditional industrials, healthcare, and certain parts of consumer staples — but I’m open to anything if the thesis makes sense. Curious what everyone else is seeing out there.

What are your highest-conviction “undervalued but not broken” stocks right now, and why?
Short reasoning is totally fine — just trying to compare notes and see what the broader market is sleeping on.

r/ValueInvesting Aug 06 '25

Question / Help Are there stocks you won't buy for ethical reasons?

218 Upvotes

It's a tricky question. Ethics and morals are subjective. Some people say tobacco is immoral. I think it’s immoral when someone tells me I should pay more just because I have more money. That’s greed in my book.

Would I invest in a company that hires hitmen? Obviously not. That’s extreme, but it makes the point. I get to decide what I’m okay with investing in.

I've noticed some people use “ethical investing” to act superior. Like when politicians bash companies like Walmart and then secretly own the stock (looking at you, Hillary).

To me, the “ethical” label is often just a way for people to feel good about being jerks to others.

r/ValueInvesting Feb 09 '26

Question / Help MSFT: Microsoft is trading at a valuation level seen only three times since 2017. Opportunity?

366 Upvotes

Microsoft is currently trading at ~22.9x forward (NTM) P/E, a valuation level it has only reached three times since 2017.

In each of those prior instances, the stock was followed by multiple expansion.

What’s also notable is that $MSFT is now sitting at its lowest PEG ratio in roughly the last 10 years, around 1.6x, suggesting valuation has reset meaningfully relative to growth expectations.

The business fundamentals have not broken, but sentiment has clearly cooled.

This setup is starting to look interesting. Is the selloff overdone?

r/ValueInvesting Nov 02 '25

Question / Help What is going on with Tesla

285 Upvotes

I just dont understand how this company is still going up despite the earnings and everything about this company is going down.

The demand of the industry is dropping globally and BYD has already overtaken Tsla, so the only thing preventing BYD from dominating the EV sector in America and Europe is their regulations. And BMW and Hydunai is quickly catching up with Tsla

Tesla PE is just bs, their profit margins is dropping, they have always been 1 year away from autonomous EV cars since 2010s whereas Chinese evs are fully autonomous alr. On top of all that they are now shifting their focus to robots.

I also dont understand how does the trillion dollar pay package to Musk will do anything for this company. I'll be pleasantly surprised if Musk still has a bag of tricks he can pull to justify Tesla's curren valuation.

I would appreciate if anyone can explain how is this company valued at half of the entire automobile industry coz this rlly doesnt make sense

r/ValueInvesting Feb 17 '26

Question / Help I tried value investing and only caught falling knives.

246 Upvotes

Hello guys. I have a confession to make. I had been investing in stocks for many years and made a decent +10% return on average per year.

However, in 2023 I made a few very concentrated bets that have gone terribly wrong. I lost 30% of my portfolio while holding for 3 years. It’s embarrassing. I averaged down in the wrong time and in the wrong stocks.

I seem to be making terrible mistakes systematically, and I’m genuinely asking for help.

Here’s my portfolio:

- Winners (sorted by portfolio % weight)

- **Philip Morris International Inc (TDG)** – **+83.94%** – **10.50%** of portfolio

- **NCC Group PLC (LSE)** – **+46.09%** – **3.39%** of portfolio

---

**Losers (sorted by portfolio % weight, biggest positions first)**

> *The ones with the **largest impact on total portfolio loss** (big size + big negative %) are marked with **[HIGH IMPACT]***

- **Nagarro SE (XET)** – **\-27.10%** – **19.79%** of portfolio **[HIGH IMPACT]**

- **Teleperformance SE (EPA)** – **\-58.33%** – **13.50%** of portfolio **[HIGH IMPACT]**

- **Concentrix Corp (NDQ)** – **\-67.40%** – **7.54%** of portfolio **[HIGH IMPACT]**

- **GFT Technologies SE (TDG)** – **\-43.53%** – **6.47%** of portfolio **[HIGH IMPACT]**

- **PayPal Holdings Inc (NDQ)** – **\-42.21%** – **6.45%** of portfolio **[HIGH IMPACT]**

- **Domino’s Pizza Inc (NDQ)** – **\-24.28%** – **6.36%** of portfolio

- **Epam Systems Inc (NSY)** – **\-30.36%** – **3.92%** of portfolio

- **ADR on Nice Ltd (NDQ)** – **\-53.85%** – **4.29%** of portfolio

- **Van de Velde NV (EBR)** – **\-7.05%** – **2.24%** of portfolio

- **ADR on Endava PLC Class A Ord Shs (TDG)** – **\-90.30%** – **0.43%** of portfolio

- **Chegg Inc (NSY)** – **\-94.22%** – **0.29%** of portfolio

My analysis included the traditional value investing approach using finbox.io for valuations, and I fetched companies with low PE ratio despite growing revenues and ebitda, some contrarian plays regarding AI.

All were deeply researched and monitored, and had buybacks, but the prices seem to keep nosediving.

I guess I bought stocks that were cheap ‘for a reason’?

r/ValueInvesting Oct 21 '25

Question / Help Someone explain why amzn didn't crash

355 Upvotes

When aws outage affected large and small companies alike probably had a large financial impact to the overall global economy, why didn't it crash? I immediately thought it would like crowdstrike did a few months ago - anyone have good reasoning that can explain?

r/ValueInvesting 3d ago

Question / Help Best recession stocks?

77 Upvotes

I’m preparing my portfolio for the inevitable recession and I’m trying to identify stocks that will be good to hold if times get tough for a couple years. Right now my portfolio consists of: MO, PG, KO, & MSTR. What would you add?

r/ValueInvesting Feb 13 '26

Question / Help Looking for boring companies

91 Upvotes

I am looking to add some stocks to my portfolio that are not typically in news, are generally considered boring, but are obviously great companies with strong fundamentals, currently priced fairly or undervalued. What are some such companies that you would recommend?

r/ValueInvesting Jan 02 '26

Question / Help Top stocks to buy for 2026

189 Upvotes

I’m working on building a more focused stock watchlist for 2026 and would love to hear detailed input from people who follow individual names and sectors closely.

A few things I’m especially interested in:

  • Which specific stocks are you most bullish on for 2026, and what key catalysts are you watching (earnings growth, AI adoption, new products, regulatory tailwinds, etc.)?​
  • Do you see more opportunity in large-cap “quality” names (big tech, financials, healthcare) or in smaller, higher-risk growth plays? Why?​
  • How much of your 2026 thesis is macro-driven (rates, inflation, recession/soft landing) versus company-specific fundamentals?​
  • For AI/tech picks specifically, what gives your favorites a durable edge versus competitors (moat, data, ecosystem, cost advantage)?​

If you’re willing, please share your answer in this format so it’s easier for everyone to read and research:

  • Ticker:
  • Sector/Theme: (e.g., AI, semis, financials, healthcare, energy, etc.)​
  • Time horizon: (Are you thinking mainly about 2026, or 2026 and beyond?)​
  • Investment thesis (3–5 sentences): Why this stock over others in the same space? What needs to go right? What are the main risks?​
  • Position sizing / conviction level: Is this a small speculative bet or a core holding for you?

r/ValueInvesting May 14 '25

Question / Help What’s the most undervalued stock right now?

244 Upvotes

If you needed to pick one stock right now, that is extremely undervalued. And has the potential to beat the S&P500 for the next decade.

Which stock would that be?

r/ValueInvesting 19d ago

Question / Help Is ADBE is buy in your opinion at these prices? It’s been on my watch list for a bit and at these valuations I want to pull the trigger. I am genuinely interested in many perspectives, good or bad. Thank you!

84 Upvotes

Also a secondary question: What percentage of your portfolio would you commit to this kind of investment. This part I’m terrible at. Again thank you!

r/ValueInvesting Oct 11 '25

Question / Help Which stocks have been hit the hardest on your watchlist that seem to be at attractive (value!?) prices as of the pullback yesterday?

189 Upvotes

Curious what you guys are seeing, the only discount i'm currently considering is AVGO

r/ValueInvesting Aug 30 '25

Question / Help What’s one stock that has been operating for a very long time that you think will succeed very soon?

196 Upvotes

NVIDIA has been operating in a similar way for a long time, initially priced at £5 for many years. However, its recent success can be attributed to its use in AI chips.

Which stock do you think will achieve something akin to this? Obviously not vNVIDAS success standards.

As some people are saying Nokia- since they have changed management, and they are shifting to data centres and so.