Using the TipRanks Stock Screener Tool, we identified three companies that have low Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratios and hold a “Strong Buy” consensus rating. Each stock also presents an impressive >30% upside potential within the next year, making them compelling investment choices.
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Trade CORZ with leverageWhy Low P/E Stocks?
Low P/E stocks trade at a discount to their earnings, letting you buy more profit per dollar invested. This inherent margin of safety buffers against market dips and losses. While some chase high P/E names for rapid growth, history shows low P/E picks often yield better long-term returns with lower risk. They also tend to offer generous dividends, hail from established companies with steady growth, and exhibit less volatility.
1) Core Scientific (CORZ)
- P/E Ratio: 5.4x
- Average Core Scientific Price Target: $26.16 (48.1% upside)
Core Scientific operates large-scale data centers primarily focused on blockchain infrastructure, Bitcoin mining, and increasingly high-performance computing (HPC) and AI workloads. The company is transitioning its 1.3 GW data center footprint to AI/HPC hosting, securing contracts that diversify revenue beyond volatile crypto mining post-Bitcoin halving. This positions CORZ to capitalize on the surging AI demand with competitive power costs and expansion plans for 2026.
2) Copa Holdings (CPA)
- P/E Ratio: 7.4x
- Average Copa Holdings Price Target: $167.89 (36.5% upside)
Copa Holdings, which operates primarily through Copa Airlines, focuses on passenger and cargo services across North, Central, South America, and the Caribbean from its Panama City hub. Copa Holdings posted 2025 net profit of $671.6 million and guided for 22%-24% margins and 11%-13% capacity growth in 2026 via fleet expansion. CPA also carries an above-industry-average dividend yield of 5.28%.
3) Geo Group (GEO)
- P/E Ratio: 8.9x
- Average Geo Group Price Target: $30.33 (69% upside)
The Geo Group operates private prisons, immigration detention centers, re-entry programs, and electronic monitoring services via long-term government contracts in the U.S. and abroad. GEO manages facilities housing tens of thousands across 100 sites globally, earning steady revenue from agencies paying for incarceration, supervision, and tech-based monitoring like ankle bracelets.

