u/Hot-Acanthisitta9777 ·
Reddit — r/ValueInvesting
· June 08, 2026 at 04:45
· ⬆ 16 pts
· 💬 13 comments
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AI Summary
Summary
The author presents a personal checklist for evaluating stocks that have dropped in price, emphasizing the need to understand the reason for the decline and to verify fundamental health (gross margin, free cash flow).
The thesis is that a price drop alone is not a buy signal; investors must distinguish between temporary macro selloffs and structural deterioration, and should use historical valuation metrics (like P/E ranges) to assess if the stock is truly cheap.
Quality assessment: This is a thoughtful, methodological discussion (not a deep-dive DD on a specific stock) that provides general investment framework, but it is speculative in nature as it offers no concrete ticker recommendations.
Score16
Comments13
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Watched a bunch of people on here buy Monday thinking the bottom was in and get wrecked by Friday. Wrote down the checklist I actually use before touching anything that's dipped.
Even if a "good" stock being down 30% isn't a reason to buy it. it's 30% cheaper than it was, which only matters if the original price was right.
Before touching anything that dipped this week, one question actually matters: why did it drop. macro selloff with no company news means the business is the same, just cheaper. Earnings miss or two years of margin compression means the price might still be adjusting to reality and you're not buying a dip, you're buying a slide.
Gross margin and FCF are the two hardest numbers to fake short term. if those are holding the thesis is probably intact. If gross margin has been going the wrong way for a couple years the drop might be correct not overdone.
And the last thing I check of course is whether it's actually cheap now or just cheaper than it was. [stocksight.org](http://stocksight.org) is free and shows historical P/E ranges with historical P/E average, been using it for my research recently.