1 Growth Stock Down 68% to Buy Right Now

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There's no denying that Dollar General (NYSE: DG) shareholders were sucker-punched last week. In response to the discount retailer's second-quarter earnings miss and lowered revenue guidance for the remainder of the year, shares fell 32% on Aug. 29, the stock's worst day ever.

Most investors are now more than a little leery of owning a stake in the discount store chain. But if you believe it's darkest before dawn, with the stock now down 68% from its 2022 peak and trading at a seven-year low, this might actually be a prime time to buy shares in this savvily positioned company.

"Financially strapped"

Dollar General dished out some serious disappointment with its second-quarter numbers. Although overall sales grew 4.2% year over year to $10.21 billion, growth in same-store sales (comps) was an anemic 0.5%. Operating profits actually fell 20%, dragging per-share profits down from $2.13 a year earlier to $1.70 this time around. Analysts were looking for earnings of $1.79 per share on a top line of $10.37 billion.

Fanning the bearish flames was lowered sales guidance for all of 2024. The retailer had been modeling revenue growth of between 6% and 6.7%, fueled by more cost-conscious consumer spending. Now it's only looking for revenue growth between 4.7% and 5.3%, with comps growth dialed back to an expected range of only 1% to 1.6%.

Perhaps the brunt of the post-earnings plunge, however, was driven by the fact that these numbers contrasted so starkly with those from similar Walmart. It produced top-line growth of 4.8%, fueled by same-store sales growth of 4.2% within the U.S. The retailer also raised its full-year revenue and earnings guidance.

What gives? The key is the difference between the two companies' typical customer. As CEO Todd Vasos commented during the second-quarter earnings conference call, the "lower-end consumer continues to be very much financially strapped, especially as it relates to her ability to feed her families and support her families."

With Dollar General's core value-minded customers unable to continue spending as they have in the past, the retailer is largely on the defensive until things get better. That could take a while, though, and matters could remain miserable for the company in the meantime. Given this, it's not surprising investors panicked.

Just remember one important idea about how the economy and the stock market work.

Dollar General's worst-case scenario is its current reality

Dollar General doesn't really go head-to-head with bigger players like Walmart or Target. If anything, it mostly avoids competing directly with either chain. Whereas Target and Walmart stores are typically found in heavily populated areas, 80% of Dollar General's stores are in often-underserved small towns with populations of less than 20,000.