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So says the firm's derivatives team, which says its seen a "sharp increase" in requests for attractively priced hedging ideas in recent weeks.
The obvious catalyst for this sudden concern is the US-China trade war, which has kicked into high gear in recent weeks. But Goldman says client concerns stretch well beyond that. And for that reason, it's be on the hunt for attractively priced downside protection.
"Broadly, our studies show that puts on stocks with low free cash flow are systematically undervalued," John Marshall, a derivatives strategist at Goldman, wrote in a recent client note.
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But finding such market dislocations is easier said than done, which is why Goldman has created a rigid methodology to aid in its pursuit.
Identifying stocks with low free-cash-flow yield - "We show that low FCF yield stocks have less downside support than high FCF stocks, yet put prices systematically underprice the downside risk," Marshall said.
Identifying stocks with downside potential - "We focus on stocks where our analysts see downside potential to their price target and rate the stocks Sell or Neutral."
Of course, one trader's hedge can another trader's bearish directional wager. In other words, it's also possible to use this strategy to profit from the assumed underlying stock decline - and do so at dirt-cheap prices. It's really up to an investor which approach they prefer.
With that established, let's get on to the list. Below are the 16 stocks identified by Goldman as best fitting the criteria listed above.
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They're listed in decreasing order of upside to price target. Each entry also provides the cost of 5% out-of-the-market put contracts - or bets a stock will fall.