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There was a time when high-flying technology stocks like Nvidia, Amazon, and Apple were trading below $20 per share. Price is not value, but investors are keen to find the low-priced stocks of today that could deliver outsized returns.
Sportradar (SRAD) provides real-time data and video content for sports leagues such as the NBA, along with media companies including ESPN and sports betting sites like DraftKings.
Key data points: Market cap $4.0B; current price $13.04; day’s range $12.78–$13.99; 52-week range $11.66–$32.22; volume 2.7M (avg 3.4M); gross margin 20.99%.
The company is described as the leader in this space, with only one other major competitor, Genius Sports (GENI). Sportradar missed earnings estimates in the most recent quarter, reporting a 0.02-euro-per-share net loss, despite an 11% increase in revenue and a 7% rise in net cash from operating activities.
Earnings were hurt by a 9 million-euro foreign currency exchange loss, compared with a 27 million-euro foreign currency exchange gain in the same quarter a year earlier. The company maintained its guidance, calling for 23% to 25% revenue growth and 34% to 37% adjusted EBITDA growth in 2026.
The stock’s recent dip to just under $14 per share is presented as a buying opportunity. The article says 86% of Wall Street analysts rate it a buy, with a price target of $19 per share, implying 42% upside.
Pagaya Technologies (PGY) is a fintech company that uses AI to help banks and lenders process loans, focusing on non-prime loans rejected by other banks. Its technology and platform are also used to find lenders for those loans.
Key data points: Market cap $1.3B; current price $15.19; day’s range $14.46–$15.87; 52-week range $10.40–$44.99; volume 6M (avg 4M); gross margin 39.37%.
The article notes that the stock climbed about 47% to $16.50 per share since the prior recommendation, with roughly 11% of that move coming on May 7 after Pagaya reported a Q1 earnings beat and raised guidance.
In the first quarter, Pagaya increased operating income by 68%, supported by an 11% revenue increase and a 9% year-over-year increase in volume on its network. It also reduced expenses by 2%, which the article says reflects scale-driven efficiencies. Net income rose 212% year over year to around $25 million.
Pagaya raised its 2026 guidance for net income by $10 million to a range of $110 million to $160 million, which the article says would be up 67% year over year at the midpoint.
The article also highlights valuation, citing a price-to-earnings ratio of 15 and a forward P/E ratio of 5 based on estimates.
Navitas Semiconductor (NVTS) is presented as the final stock under $20, but the article says investors should wait rather than buy immediately. The suggestion is to look toward the end of 2026 for more information and potentially a lower price.
Key data points: Market cap $4.3B; current price $18.20; day’s range $15.60–$18.20; 52-week range $1.88–$19.79; volume 35M (avg 26M); gross margin -1669.05%.
The article says Navitas has made a major pivot from chips for consumer electronics to chips for data centers and other large power markets. It adds that the pivot caused earnings to sputter last year and that gains are expected to be muted in 2026.
For later years, the article points to expectations that Navitas will generate significant revenue from its partnership with Nvidia, with its chips included in Nvidia’s new data center architecture. It states that Wall Street analysts expect Navitas revenue to spike 72% in 2027 when the new architecture rolls out.
It also notes that the news has pushed Navitas stock to an 118% year-to-date gain to over $15 per share. The article characterizes the stock as somewhat overvalued, citing a price-to-sales ratio of 71, and says the price may settle in the coming weeks and months.
Premium gym chains are entering a “golden era” that is ending or already in decline, as rising operating costs collide with shifting consumer preferences toward more flexible, community-based ways to exercise. Long-term memberships are shrinking, margins are pressured by higher rents and facility expenses, and competition from smaller, more personalized…