What "cheap" actually means in these calls
Cheap is one of the most abused words on finance YouTube, and the distinction this list cares about is the one creators sometimes blur: a low share price is not the same as an undervalued company. A $4 stock can be expensive and a $400 stock can be a bargain — what matters is price against earnings, cash flow or assets. So this ranking does not surface "penny" names by price; it surfaces the stocks where a creator builds an actual value case — trading below what the business is worth, with a reason it is mispriced.
That value case is exactly what our filter is looking for. "This stock is cheap" on its own never survives extraction; the segment has to name the stock, take a stance and give the reasoning — a depressed multiple, a temporary problem the market over-punished, a sum-of-parts gap. The table above is the set of names where that argument was made on camera and where multiple channels independently agree the market has it wrong.
Why value calls split creators — and how to use that
Undervalued lists are where finance YouTubers disagree most, and that disagreement is the useful signal. A stock is "cheap" precisely because the market is pessimistic, so for every creator calling it a bargain there is often another calling it a value trap — a business that is cheap for a good reason and keeps getting cheaper. When you see a mixed consensus here, do not skip the name; open it and read both sides, because the bear case on a value stock is usually more informative than the bull case.
The discipline that protects you is the same one this site is built around: check who is talking. A value investor with a measured track record against the S&P 500 calling a stock cheap is a different signal from a momentum channel that just wants a bounce. We aggregate the consensus and link every call to its source video so you can judge the argument yourself — and, as always, none of this is financial advice.