5 Value Stocks That Will Make You Richer in 2021
Since the end of the Great Recession, growth stocks have been unstoppable. Historically low lending rates have allowed access to cheap capital, which is fueling hiring, innovation, acquisitions, and expansion.
But something you might not realize is that, over the long run, value stocks
As we steam ahead into the new year, the following five value stocks stand out as bargains that have the potential to make you a lot richer in 2021.
Exelixis
There are a lot of ways to measure value beyond just the price-to-earnings ratio. When it comes to cancer-drug developer Exelixis (NASDAQ: EXEL), an intriguing value metric is its price-to-earnings-growth ratio, or
The Exelixis growth story primarily revolves around cancer drug Cabometyx, which is approved to treat first-and-second-line renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). These two indications should combine to yield north of $1 billion in annual sales for Exelixis this year.
Aside from increasing demand and strong pricing power, Exelixis' lead drug is involved in
Exelixis is also flush with cash and liable to generate in the neighborhood of $500 million in cash flow each year. A healthy balance sheet will afford opportunities for the company to reinvest internally, and possibly even make an acquisition.
Wells Fargo
Among financial stocks, none looks to be more of a screaming bargain than money-center bank Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC). At 76% of its book value, Wells Fargo is near its cheapest multiple relative to book value in at least three decades.
Cheap stocks usually become cheap for a reason. In Wells Fargo's case, it was because the company opened 3.5 million unauthorized accounts between 2009 and 2016. It's since paid hefty fines to the Justice Department and reworked how it cross-sells at the branch level to avoid a reoccurrence. Thankfully, PR nightmares rarely have any lasting effect on
However, resolving its PR issue isn't the only reason to consider buying into Wells Fargo. This is a bank that's historically outpaced its peers with regard to return on assets and has always
Look for Wells Fargo to steadily reduce its noninterest expenses, focus on digitization, and stick to the bread-and-butter of banking growth (loan and deposit growth) in 2021.
Walgreens Boots Alliance
The healthcare sector is chock-full of
Walgreens was hit with a double whammy last year. First, foot traffic fell off a cliff for a period of time due to the coronavirus pandemic. Secondly, Amazon announced that it would be entering the online pharmacy space. Since pharmacy margins are considerably higher than front-end retail sales, Walgreens can ill-afford an uptick in price competition among prescription drugs.
The good news is that Walgreens Boots Alliance
Furthermore, Walgreens has
At roughly eight times forward earnings, Walgreens is too inexpensive to pass up.
Yamana Gold
It might be hard to believe, but the vast majority of gold stocks are now value stocks following the monumental rally in the price of physical gold. In 2021, miner Yamana Gold (NYSE: AUY) has the potential to make investors richer.
The bull thesis for
More specific to Yamana Gold, it's going to benefit from a significant uptick in operating cash flow. Yamana has worked hard in recent years to reduce its debt. As of the end of September, Yamana's net debt stood at $619 million, down over $1 billion in half a decade. Improved output at the 50%-owned Canadian Malartic mine, along with the ramp-up of Cerro Moro, should help Yamana Gold
Historically, I've found mining stocks to be fairly valued at a multiple of 10 times annual cash flow per share. With Yamana expected to bring in north of $1 in cash flow per share in 2021, its share price of $6 makes it one heck of a bargain.
Teva Pharmaceutical Industries
Last but certainly not least, brand-name and generic-drug developer Teva Pharmaceutical Industries (NYSE: TEVA)
Like Wells Fargo, there's a good reason cheap stocks are cheap. In Teva's case, it's because the previous management team buried the company in debt. It also has to do with a handful of lawsuits the company is facing concerning generic drug price-fixing and its alleged role in the opioid crisis.
While defending itself against lawsuits is far from ideal,
Teva also finds itself on the right side of history. America is aging, and brand-name drug-list prices keep moving higher. It's a virtual certainty that generics are going to play a large role for aging boomers in the decades to come.
Opportunistic investors can scoop up shares of Teva for just four times Wall Street's consensus earnings forecast for 2021.
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