10 growth stocks with low PEG ratios


10 growth stocks with low PEG

We will provide an explanation on how to interpret this ratio and present 10 companies with an EPS (Earnings Per Share) growth above 15% and a PEG ratio below 1. A PEG ratio below 1 indicaties undervaluation, ideal for investors seeking value-based growth opportunities. Important to note is that a shortlist of potential opportunities needs further rigorous analysis to check for more quality indicators.

Nvidia

NVIDIA Corporation provides graphics, and compute and networking solutions in the United States, Taiwan, China, and internationally. The company’s products are used in gaming, professional visualization, datacenter, and automotive markets.

Country: US
Sector: Semiconductors
Market cap: $3,411B
RevenueCAGR: 62.43%
EPS CAGR: 91.76%
PEG: 0.48x

Brown & Brown

Brown & Brown, Inc. markets and sells insurance products and services. It operates through four segments: Retail, National Programs, Wholesale Brokerage, and Services.

Country: US
Sector: Insurance
Market cap: $29.77B
RevenueCAGR: 14.5%
EPS CAGR: 21.25%
PEG: 0.88x

Qapital Insights

Academic rigor meets entrepreneurial reality. We analyze service company acquisitions through a behavioral finance lens - finding mispriced opportunities that institutional buyers miss. 25 years of building businesses + PhD research in behavioral finance = practical insights for the bootstrapped acquirer.

Read more from Qapital Insights

Behavioral analysis: What Novo Nordisk's 60% decline reveals about market psychology Novo Nordisk down 60% despite strong fundamentals. Our behavioral analysis reveals why market psychology creates acquisition opportunities for investors. Read more

Warren Buffett's $100 billion brain hack: The psychology behind his returns Today, we're decoding the four mental frameworks that separated Buffett from everyone else. This isn't motivation. It's applied neuroscience that transformed a normal brain into a wealth-building machine. Read article

The $850 million mistake: How anchoring bias destroyed a hedge fund This isn’t just another trading disaster story. This is about anchoring bias—a psychological trap so subtle that even Nobel Prize winners fall victim. And it’s probably costing you money right now. Read more