Some beaten-down stocks are cheap for a reason, but a select few sit at the rare crossroads of technical washout and genuine undervaluation. Three names acrossSome beaten-down stocks are cheap for a reason, but a select few sit at the rare crossroads of technical washout and genuine undervaluation. Three names across

Where Oversold Meets Undervalued: 3 Dividend and Growth Plays for Income Investors

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Retirement portfolios need beaten-down stocks with a survival plan, not just a low price tag. Before ranking three names, it helps to draw a sharp line between two conditions that are often confused.

Oversold is a technical condition. It means a stock has been sold hard and fast, its Relative Strength Index (RSI) is pinned below 40, and it trades near the low end of its recent range. Undervalued is a fundamental condition. The share price reflects a reasonable estimate of intrinsic worth, often shown in a low forward price-to-earnings ratio and analyst targets meaningfully above the current quote. The best retirement-fit setups live in the overlap. They are stocks that are both oversold and undervalued, backed by durable cash flow and (ideally) a dependable dividend.

All three names below meet that overlap test. Here we rank them by suitability for a retirement portfolio, weighting income durability, valuation discipline, and volatility. These three span software, consumer staples, and telecom. (Also check out three other stocks in the retirement portfolio sweet spot.)

3. Adobe (The Growth Wildcard)

Adobe (NASDAQ:ADBE) is the spiciest pick here. Shares have fallen 41.2% over the past year and 36.7% year to date, with the weekly RSI at 36.22. That checks the oversold box. On valuation, Adobe trades at a forward P/E of 9x, with a PEG ratio of 0.6. Its $272.48 consensus analyst target is well above the recent price of $221.54.

Operationally, Adobe is compounding. Q2 FY2026 delivered record revenue of $6.62 billion, up 13% year over year, non-GAAP EPS of $5.96 (a fifth consecutive beat), and AI-first ARR that tripled to more than $500 million. The catch for retirees: Adobe pays no dividend and carries a beta of 1.43. Great business, wrong risk profile for income-first portfolios, hence the third-place finish.

2. General Mills (Defensive Income Play)

General Mills (NYSE:GIS) is the textbook defensive name. The stock is down 28.4% over the past year, and touched an RSI low of 22.52 on May 15, 2026, with the most recent weekly reading at 46.40. Valuation is friendly: a forward P/E of 12x, a dividend yield of 6.49%, and a near-zero beta of −0.05.

Fundamentals are stabilizing. Fiscal Q4 2026 delivered revenue of $4.61 billion, up 1.2%, and adjusted EPS of $0.95 versus a $0.82 estimate, a 15.85% beat. Management guided FY2027 adjusted EPS to $3.00 to $3.20 and is targeting $3 billion in cumulative cost savings by FY2030. The $0.61 quarterly dividend was just declared. A low beta plus a 6.6% yield makes this a strong retirement fit, though category weakness and prior Pet-segment impairments keep it just shy of the top spot.

Income investors may also want to review the free 24/7 Wall St. report Dividend Traps as a due-diligence checklist.

1. AT&T (The Sweet-Spot Winner)

AT&T (NYSE:T) hits every box on the retirement checklist. Shares are down 25.8% over the past year and 15.1% year to date, with a weekly RSI of 35.17. That is textbook oversold. Valuation is genuinely cheap: a trailing P/E of 7x, a forward P/E of 9x, a dividend yield of 5.3%, and an analyst target of $30.02 against a recent quote of $21.09. A beta of 0.42 keeps portfolio drawdowns contained.

The operating story is quietly accelerating. Q1 2026 revenue was $31.51 billion, up 2.9%, and adjusted EPS came in at $0.57, up 11.8%. The company added 584,000 net internet subscribers with churn of 0.89%. Management reaffirmed FY2026 adjusted EPS of $2.25 to $2.35 and free cash flow of over $18 billion, with $8 billion in buybacks planned and the $0.2775 quarterly dividend. That combination of income durability, a cheap forward multiple, low beta, and improving fiber-plus-5G economics is exactly what a retirement investor wants from a beaten-down stock.

Tying It Back Together

The overlap of oversold and undervalued is where retirement capital does its best work, provided the business behind the discount is durable. Adobe is oversold and cheap, but the missing dividend and higher beta push it down the list. General Mills brings a fortress-grade yield and near-zero beta, ideal for capital preservation. AT&T carries the cleanest mix of technical washout, single-digit forward earnings multiple, committed dividend, and improving free cash flow. This makes it the top pick for retirement portfolios today. Size positions to your own income needs and time horizon.

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The post Where Oversold Meets Undervalued: 3 Dividend and Growth Plays for Income Investors appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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