Top 10 Value Stocks Under $50
The best value stocks priced under $50 — screened for low P/E ratios, strong earnings, reasonable debt, and solid return on equity. Affordable entry points for value-focused investors.
| # | Ticker | Company | Price | P/E |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | HPQ | HP Inc. $17.6B | $19.18 | 7.3x |
| 2 | CMCSA | Comcast Corporation $116.9B | $32.09 | 6.0x |
| 3 | APA | APA Corporation $11.1B | $31.10 | 7.4x |
| 4 | GIS | General Mills, Inc. $23.2B | $43.56 | 9.4x |
| 5 | T | AT&T Inc. $205.5B | $28.98 | 9.5x |
| 6 | DVN | Devon Energy Corporation $27.0B | $43.49 | 10.4x |
| 7 | RF | Regions Financial Corporation $24.4B | $27.83 | 12.1x |
| 8 | TFC | Truist Financial Corporation $62.8B | $49.11 | 12.9x |
| 9 | HBAN | Huntington Bancshares Incorporated $34.2B | $16.83 | 12.1x |
| 10 | CPB | The Campbell's Company $7.5B | $25.09 | 12.9x |
⚠️ Important: A low stock price does not automatically mean good value. These stocks are screened for fundamentals like P/E ratio, earnings, and return on equity — not just price. Always do your own research and consider your risk tolerance. This is not financial advice.
Understanding Value Investing
P/E Ratio
Price-to-earnings ratio. A P/E under 15 is generally considered good value. Under 10 may signal deep value or potential issues — always investigate why.
Return on Equity
ROE measures how efficiently a company uses shareholder equity to generate profits. Above 15% is strong. Above 20% is excellent.
Price-to-Book
Compares market price to book value. Under 1.0 means the stock trades below its net asset value — a classic value signal (but check why it's cheap).