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Exclusive Story from MarketBeat 5 Oversold Large-Cap Stocks That May Be Worth Buying SoonReported by Ryan Hasson. Article Published: 3/16/2026. 
Key Points - With a broad market selloff pushing many large-cap stocks into value territory, five stocks in particular are worth watching for potential opportunities.
- Delta Air Lines, JPMorgan Chase, and Bank of America have all fallen sharply this month, pushing their valuations into deep value territory while analysts remain overwhelmingly bullish on each.
- Toyota and Unilever round out the list, with both stocks flashing oversold RSI readings and sitting on key technical support levels despite solid underlying fundamentals.
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A sea of red has swept the market in recent weeks. Inflationary fears are rising, the odds of a Fed rate cut are dwindling, and oil prices are surging as tensions in the Middle East intensify. What began early in the year as selling pressure concentrated in mega-cap technology and software stocks, driven by concerns around AI capital expenditure and competitive moats, has evolved into a broad, market-wide selloff. The layers of fear and uncertainty have taken their toll: the S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY) closed last week down 1.5% and is now down just over 3% for the year. That said, fear-driven selloffs can create buying opportunities when fundamentally sound stocks are pushed into oversold or deep-value territory. One way to spot those opportunities is the Relative Strength Index (RSI), which flags when a stock may be technically oversold. Another is comparing forward P/E ratios to sector peers, which can reveal when a stock has been punished beyond what its earnings outlook warrants. With that framework, here are five large-cap stocks worth watching as the selloff deepens. Delta Air Lines: A Value Signal Hiding Inside a Steep Pullback Delta Air Lines (NYSE: DAL) has been one of the hardest-hit names recently, falling almost 18% this month alone and now down just over 15% year to date. Its RSI has dropped to 34, nearing oversold territory, but the valuation metrics stand out. DAL trades at a trailing P/E of 7.7 and a forward P/E near 7 — levels that historically signal a potential value opportunity. The key question is whether this is a value opportunity or a value trap. On the fundamentals, the opportunity case looks stronger. Delta posted record full-year 2025 revenue of $58.3 billion, delivered a 10% operating margin and generated $4.6 billion in free cash flow — a company record that materially reduced leverage and produced a 12% return on invested capital. Management is guiding 2026 EPS of $6.50 to $7.50, implying roughly 20% year-over-year growth, alongside free cash flow of $3–$4 billion and a target leverage ratio of about 2x by year-end. Wall Street is largely bullish, with a consensus Moderate Buy rating and a price target implying nearly 35% upside from current levels. Institutional activity supports that view, with roughly $6.4 billion in inflows over the prior 12 months versus about $4 billion in outflows. On the chart, DAL is attempting to find support near its 50-day SMA; if it can form a base around the $60 level, that could signal a stabilization and a potential entry point for longer-term investors. JPMorgan Chase: Sector Pressure Creates a Window JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM) has been dragged lower with the broader financial sector, as the sector ETF is down nearly 11% YTD and over 7% this month. Selling has been amplified by fears about private credit exposure spreading from alternative asset managers to major banks with lending ties to that space. JPM has fallen almost 9% this month and is trading nearly 16% off its 52-week high. Its RSI has dipped toward 32, approaching short-term oversold levels, and the forward P/E has fallen to about 12 — a clear value signal for one of the world's most profitable financial institutions. Technical caution is warranted: the stock is trading below key moving averages, and the financial sector remains in a firm downtrend, so timing any entry matters. Fundamentally, the story remains intact. In Q4 2025, JPM reported EPS of $5.23, beating consensus of $4.93, while quarterly revenue rose 7.1% year-over-year to $45.8 billion. Analysts maintain a Moderate Buy consensus rating, with a price target implying nearly 20% upside, making JPM worth watching for signs of sector stabilization. Bank of America: Deep Value With an Income Kicker Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) has seen similar selling pressure, sliding 13% this month and now down just over 15% YTD for many of the same reasons as JPMorgan. The pullback has pushed BAC's valuation into attractive territory. Its forward P/E has fallen to 9.4, firmly in value territory for a large-cap bank, and the stock yields about 2.5%, offering income for patient investors. As with JPM, the technical picture calls for caution: BAC trades below key moving averages and the financial sector has yet to show durable stabilization. Investors looking to build a position may prefer to wait for the stock and sector to find support and start forming a base. Still, analysts are constructive, giving BAC a Moderate Buy consensus rating and a price target of $60.30, implying nearly 30% upside from current levels — one of the more compelling risk-reward setups here if the sector turns. Toyota Motor Corporation: An Earnings Beat Washed Out by Market Fear Toyota Motor Corporation (NYSE: TM) is down more than 15% from its February highs and fell roughly 13% this month, despite reporting a strong earnings beat just weeks ago. The global automaker reported Q3 fiscal 2026 EPS of $6.26 on Feb. 6, topping the consensus estimate of $4.35 by $1.91. The stock initially rallied, but has since been swept lower by the broader wave of market fear. That disconnect between business performance and share price is exactly what makes Toyota worth watching. The stock now shows an oversold RSI and trades at a forward P/E of about 9.78 — attractive for a company of Toyota's scale and global reach. Importantly, the stock remains above its 200-day SMA, suggesting the longer-term uptrend is technically intact despite short-term turbulence. Net institutional inflows over the prior 12 months bolster the bull case, as does the analyst consensus Moderate Buy rating with a price target implying nearly 38% upside — the highest on this list. Unilever plc ADR: A Failed Breakout Into a Major Support Zone Unilever plc (NYSE: UL) rounds out the list as a consumer-defensive giant that pulled back sharply after a failed breakout above $70, which triggered a fast move back into a key support zone near $60. That drop reset the stock's forward P/E to 15.9 and pushed its RSI down to 27 — deeply oversold territory. The stock also offers a 3.4% dividend yield, providing income while investors wait for a potential recovery. What makes Unilever interesting here is the higher-timeframe context. Despite the near-term breakdown, the stock remains above key moving averages on its monthly chart and sits on significant long-term support near $62. Analyst sentiment is more neutral, with a consensus Hold rating, and institutional activity has been relatively flat, with inflows roughly offsetting outflows. Still, an RSI of 27 combined with a sharp flush into major support makes Unilever a compelling oversold watch candidate. If buyers step in and support holds, Unilever could set up a strong oversold-bounce opportunity. |
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