Cathie Wood Goes Bargain Hunting: 2 Stocks She Just Bought

Key Points

Some investors may be checking out heading into the holiday weekend, but that's not Cathie Wood's style. The founder and CEO of Ark Invest and stock picker for its growth-geared exchange-traded funds always keeps busy. She announces her trades at the end of every market day. And she bought a couple of stocks on Thursday.

Ark added to its existing positions in Baidu (NASDAQ: BIDU) and Nextdoor (NYSE: KIND) on Thursday. It's a contrarian move on both fronts, as the stocks are down 20% to 42% over the past year. Let's take a closer look at Wood's latest purchases.

1. Baidu

China's leading search engine is still searching for a growth engine. Shares of Baidu have declined 6% in the two trading days since the company posted fresh financials on Wednesday morning. Revenue rose 3% to the U.S. equivalent of nearly $4.5 billion. It may not seem like much, but it's actually Baidu's strongest top-line showing in more than a year.

Baidu isn't the rock star it was when it went public 20 years ago as an ascending giant in search and online advertising in China. Annual revenue has clocked in with double-digit growth just once in the last six years. Half of those years have treated shareholders to top-line declines.

The quarter only gets worse if you work your way down the income statement. Adjusted earnings declined 8% to $891 million. Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization ( EBITDA ) slipped 6% to $925 million. On the bright side, the bottom line was comfortably ahead of Wall Street expectations for the first quarter.

Cathie Wood Goes Bargain Hunting: 2 Stocks She Just Bought

Baidu's stock chart reflects its failure to launch as a growth stock in recent years. The shares are trading 20% lower over the past year, off by nearly a third over the past three years. Wood seems to think that now is a good time to add to her stake following this week's post-earnings pullback. I would have to agree.

Baidu is sheltered to a certain extent from the trade war fallout, as it generates the lion's share of its revenue in China. There are also some promising pockets of growth in its business. The unimpressive 3% overall increase in revenue was held back by a 9% decline for its iQIYI streaming video platform. Back that out, and core Baidu revenue rose a more encouraging 7%.

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