The “Magnificent Seven” group of stocks is a well-known cohort that makes up the world’s largest companies. It includes:
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Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA)
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Alphabet
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Apple
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Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT)
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Amazon
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Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META)
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Tesla
These seven stocks have been great investments over the years, but rarely are they called cheap. However, I think we’re nearing that point, and some of these stocks could be scooped up at a fairly attractive valuation compared to just a few months back.
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Which ones are now cheap? Let’s take a look.
First, we must select a validation tool. Because several of these stocks are rapidly growing, valuing them on forward earnings is the best tool, in my opinion. While trailing earnings is a more concrete way to value a company, the AI boom is causing many of these companies’ earnings to soar, so valuing them based on the past 12 months isn’t a fair representation of the current state of the business. As a result, using forward earnings gives investors the best picture of what’s going on right now with each of these stocks.
From this standpoint, all of their valuations have converged on a fairly typical range, except for Tesla. Tesla trades at nearly 200 times forward earnings, so I have excluded it from the chart.
AMZN PE Ratio (Forward) data by YCharts.
All of the stocks are trading from about 30 times forward earnings all the way down to about 22. The ones in the 22 to 24 times forward earnings range are the ones that I’m focused on, with Nvidia, Microsoft, and Meta Platforms all looking like pretty good bargains.
These low prices are compounded by the fact that the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) trades for 21.8 times forward earnings. Essentially, these stocks are basically valued at the market average, but their results are far from average.
Starting with Nvidia, there have been a few times when you can buy the stock as cheaply as it is right now during its major run since 2023. There’s really no good reason for it to be down. While some investors may fear an artificial intelligence (AI) bubble is forming, Amazon, Alphabet, and Meta Platforms, over the past few weeks, said they plan to spend over $500 billion in capital expenditures, mostly going toward data centers, combined in 2026. That money will flow to several different areas, but Nvidia will receive a solid slice of the pie for its computing units. This will result in another massive year of growth for Nvidia. Wall Street analysts back up this sentiment and project that Nvidia’s revenue will rise 52% during the fiscal year (FY) of 2027 (ending January 2027). There isn’t a bigger no-brainer buy in the market than Nvidia, and right now is an excellent time to load up on the stock if you haven’t done so already.
