TipRanks’ ‘Perfect 10’ Picks: 2 Top-Scoring Stocks for the Rest of 2024
With the end of 2024 approaching, what could be more natural than to figure out the top stocks for the rest of the year?
Stock picking of this sort is an essential skill for every investor, and fortunately, the Smart Score make it easier. This data gathering and sorting tool from TipRanks uses a combination of AI tech and natural language algorithms to gather and comb through the aggregated data of the stock market – data derived from thousands of traders dealing in thousands of stocks for tens of millions of daily transactions – and it uses that data to give every stock a simple score, on a scale of 1 to 10 and based on the stock’s standing against a set of factors known to match up with future outperformance.
We’ve opened up the TipRanks databanks to find two of these top-scoring stocks that investors should consider for the rest of 2024. These are ‘Perfect 10’ stocks, stocks that have earned the highest possible Smart Score.
Boot Barn Holdings (BOOT)
We’ll start in the retail world, with Boot Barn. This company operates in the lifestyle niche, offering customers a range of Western-themed apparel, footwear, and accessories. The company is particularly noted for its high-end Western boots and its cold-weather outdoor gear. Boot Barn also deals in hiking shoes and work boots, rugged work clothes, Western-style fashion, and even cowboy hats. The company’s clothing is marketed to men, women, and kids and is complemented by a range of décor and gifts.
The Boot Barn company was founded in 1978 and has grown since then to become the largest Western-themed lifestyle retail firm. The company operates through a network of brick-and-mortar stores, more than 420 of them across 46 states, and through an e-commerce operation that includes three websites: bootbarn.com, sheplers.com, and countryoutfitter.com.
BOOT shares have fallen 16% following the fiscal Q2 report on October 28. Revenue showed year-over-year growth, and earnings were in line with expectations, but investors reacted to the unexpected announcement that CEO Jim Conroy will step down on November 22.
Baird analyst Jonathan Komp sees the drop in share price as an opportunity and writes about the stock: “We were surprised by the stock’s sizable decline following the news CEO Jim Conroy plans to leave for Ross Stores in November, as strong continuity across BOOT’s remaining team reduces near-term disruption risk. Factoring BOOT’s +5% raise to F2025E EPS guidance, the >25% correction in BOOT’s NTM P/E appears overdone given strong comps momentum and near-term visibility. We also view pushback to BOOT’s ending inventory as flimsy, given limited markdown risk.”
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