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As Markets Crater, Buy On The Dip? Not These 2 Stocks (At Least Not Yet)

Published 03/17/2020, 05:09 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 02:05 AM

As this historic selloff in equity markets continues, the temptation to buy stocks is also high. Investors who were left out in the unprecedented boom of the past decade have long waited for a market 'correction' of this magnitude to buy their favorite stocks at extremely low prices.

There is no harm in being smart when others are fearful. This is the instinct that Warren Buffett, one of the most successful value investors, urges in highly distressed market conditions like the one we're currently experiencing.

But as you get ready to make your move in this bear market, we also want to highlight the stocks which, in our view, don’t make good candidates for our buy-on-the-dip strategy. Here are two names that fit in this category:

1. Boeing

Global travel bans and potential airline bankruptcies are likely to put further pressure on Boeing (NYSE:BA) stock, which was a great turnaround bet for 2020 just before the coronavirus pandemic changed everything.

With a lot of uncertainty surrounding the travel industry and the future of its flagship 737 MAX plane hanging in the balance, it’s hard to see the bottom for Boeing's stock, which lost about a quarter of its market value as of yesterday’s carnage.

The stock fell about 24% during Monday’s trading to close at $129.61. The market rout of the past month has wiped out all the gains that the world’s largest plane manufacturer accrued in its rally that began in September 2016.

Boeing Weekly Price Chart

The embattled Chicago-based aviaton company is facing an array of headwinds right now. Last week it told employees it was immediately suspending hiring as well as implementing other measures to preserve cash. These moves come as the fast spreading coronavirus drastically cut air travel and damaged airlines worldwide.

Before the company’s recent measures to preserve cash, Boeing was already reeling from the damage of two fatal crashes of its 737 MAX that claimed 346 lives and forced regulators globally to ground the plane which is so crucial for the company’s future growth.

The current slump is raising speculation that the next step in Boeing’s push to preserve cash could be a cut in its once rock-solid dividend. JPMorgan, while downgrading the stock last week, said that may be in the cards as the company faces diminishing price target calls across Wall Street.

2. Tesla

Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) had a great run before the recent rally began to unravel. Its stock surged four-fold in the nine months to Feb. 17 on very strong signs that the troubled electric car maker had turned the corner by overcoming its production challenges.

The company beat analyst revenue estimates for 4Q and accelerated the introduction of its new Model Y crossover. As well, the completion of its Shanghai factory in record time and Tesla's success in exceeding its ambitious goal of selling 360,000 vehicles in 2019 also offered a powerful signal that the Palo Alto, CA-based company could rapidly become a meaningful industry player if it continued to meet its targets.

But the bullish demand case for Tesla cars has weakened significantly with major economies potentially slipping into a recession, triggered by the coronavirus pandemic.

“At current levels, Tesla stock remains high enough that it takes very aggressive assumptions on its future auto business to justify its valuation on a [discounted cash flow] basis,” Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi said in a note to investors yesterday.

Tesla Weekly Price Chart

Tesla shares tumbled more than 18% on Monday to trade at $445.07. The stock has fallen amid the broader sell-off in U.S. markets, with Tesla down more than 50% since hitting a high of $968.99 in February.

A major economic contraction in China is a significant challenge for Tesla in particular because a large proportion of the company’s growth trajectory is dependent on that country, one of the major global markets for electric cars.

Sino fixed asset investment for January and February dropped 24.5% from the same period last year. China's industrial production was down 13.5%, with automotive output tumbling 46%. Tesla aims to sell 500,000 vehicles this year. This goal may now prove hard to meet, some analysts say.

“Given the demand overhang from the coronavirus outbreak in China as well as Europe we believe that 1Q unit demand levels will be difficult to hit for Tesla and is a dynamic currently being factored by the Street,” Wedbush Securities’ analyst Dan Ives wrote in a recent note to investors.

Bottom Line

The outbreak of coronavirus has badly damaged the investment case for both Tesla and Boeing. These stocks don't seem to have reached a bottom yet, especially when the worst of this pandemic is yet to come.

Latest comments

I wouldn't buy Tesla til the market is well on its way back up.  The product build and price insure it remains purely a discretionary product from now til long into the future!
May The Almight assist the the world against the deadly pandemic malady that claims lives the same way it claims the worldly economic health.
Ba lost a quarter? more like 3/4 from 426 to 95. WOW. good points. it's a buy below 70 imo
Lolzz. Both are one of the best buys!
Did you seriously write this today, March 17th, and not when prices were 50% higher? Come on, you must realize thst everybody and their cat figured that out about ten days and several hundred million ago...no cred
The term "buy on the dip" starts sounding like a joke now while we are surely heading into a recession with more way down for sure.
Buy dips and hold for maybe 30 mins, while you hold your breath. lol
Tesla is a fantastic manufacturer who because of this crisis became victim. However their stock price was a fantasy, like Bitcoin. now that the Stock market has picked every potential Tesla buyers pocket. In order to be able to by one of their autos 0% interest will be key. Can I get a $75.00 share price shout out?
let's be clear BA has proved itself to be a ********manufacturer. They have no right selling defective products. anyone who gets on one of their defective products is at risk. Let BA RIP
The numbers on the virus do not add up America needs to wake up
Nothing adds up. Here in America they teach Common Core Math now. It will take a while to add things up and put together something in their minds worse than Coronavirus
Just the ones Im buying at both hands. Gotta be a bit dumb to advise to not buy what probably are the clearest, most logical bargains out there.
i start to believe that this epidemic is a chemical war bwtween usa and china.
You dont know that as a fact, please dont spread false info
We do not know yet if this kills children or young adults. The only 34yr old to die from this was the doctor who tried to tell everyone about the virus but first went to the Chinese government. All we are told is that it kills older people and yet we donu0027t even get names. We have no update on the 21 people taken to a Military facility from that cruise ship either. What if...there is something much bigger than Coronavirus that has been used to coverup and keep our minds occupied so there is no real, true panic from whatu0027s about to happen?
  And Tinkerbell will fly down and move all the children to Neverland....away from the evil conspirators trying to control our world.   People like you are a threat to the friggin' gene pool!
There is no epidemic it's all a total coup attempt
i agree
It is just a normal flu
Go back to sleep Abe. You woke up on the wrong side of bed!
BA is too big to fail for national security..
Keep in mind however that Boeing has an ace up their sleeve that Tesla doesn't. Boeing is "too big to fail" in the eyes of the US Government. Too many jobs at stake, the only remaining large airframe maker, and a critical defense contractor. No, the government can't afford to let them fail. However if their debts get large enough, at some point a structured bankruptcy like GM's in 2009 might take place which would mean that all the shareholder equity is wiped out to give them a clean slate.
thanks Harris.......
are you holding these two?
Dow has a great resistance in 19000, be ready for market reverse.
Not only Tesla and Boeing, most stocks have not reached a bottom yet. A lot more stocks have fallen more than these 2. We have always gotten it wrong with Tesla and will continue to get it wrong. Who would imagine that new vehicles will be off the production line at this time.
Yeah of course it has to zero to go
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