There's something intriguing about oversold stocks in the technology sector. When selling pressure drives prices down hard enough, these beaten-down names can transform from falling knives into legitimate value opportunities. The key is knowing when the selloff has gone too far.
The Relative Strength Index, or RSI, helps answer that question. This momentum indicator compares how a stock performs on up days versus down days, giving traders insight into short-term price action. When the RSI drops below 30, it typically signals that an asset has been oversold and could be due for a bounce.
Right now, three major tech players are flashing oversold signals that are worth paying attention to. Here's what's happening with each of them.
Motorola Solutions Shows Resilience Despite Recent Decline
Motorola Solutions Inc. (MSI) has seen its shares drop roughly 6% over the past month, pushing its RSI down to 27.3. The stock hit a 52-week low of $365.40 and closed Thursday at $371.49, down 1.1% for the day.
The decline comes even as the company makes strategic moves to strengthen its security business. On November 19, Motorola Solutions announced it acquired Blue Eye, a Salt Lake City-based company that enhances threat detection capabilities.
"Security professionals know that the challenge isn't solely identifying the threat; it's about moving from detection to action in a matter of seconds," said Mahesh Saptharishi, executive vice president and chief technology officer at Motorola Solutions. "The acquisition of Blue Eye is a key component of our strategic focus to provide a single, tightly integrated workflow that seamlessly connects threat detection, verification and response."
Despite the recent weakness, Motorola Solutions carries a momentum score of 17.40 and a value score of 16.01, suggesting the selloff may have created an entry point for patient investors.
Zscaler Beats Earnings But Market Isn't Impressed
Zscaler Inc. (ZS) presents an interesting case study in how markets can ignore good news when sentiment turns negative. On November 25, the cloud security company reported quarterly earnings of 96 cents per share, handily beating the Street estimate of 86 cents. Revenue came in at $788.1 million, topping analyst expectations of $773.75 million.
"Our outstanding Q1 results demonstrate the strong demand we are experiencing for our Zero Trust and AI Security platform," said Jay Chaudhry, CEO of Zscaler.
You'd think beating both earnings and revenue estimates would help a stock, but Zscaler has fallen around 25% over the past month anyway. Shares closed Thursday at $241.85, down 0.7%, near the company's 52-week low of $164.78. The RSI now sits at 25.9, firmly in oversold territory.
Sometimes the market prices in future concerns even when current results look solid. But an RSI this low suggests the pendulum may have swung too far in the bearish direction.
Nutanix Faces Toughest Challenge With Guidance Miss
Nutanix Inc. (NTNX) has taken the hardest hit of the three, plunging roughly 32% over the past month. The stock's RSI has crashed to just 20, the lowest reading among these oversold tech names. Shares closed Thursday at $47.11, down 0.7%, hovering just above the 52-week low of $46.13.
The selling intensified after Nutanix reported on November 25. The cloud computing company posted worse-than-expected first-quarter sales results and issued second-quarter sales guidance that fell short of analyst estimates.
"We expect that the revenue over time remains unchanged. We expect this dynamic to continue and have factored it in our Q2 and updated full-year revenue guidance," said Rukmini Sivaraman, CFO of Nutanix.
Missing guidance is never fun, and the market's reaction shows it. But an RSI of 20 is extremely oversold. It doesn't guarantee an immediate rebound, but it does suggest that most sellers who wanted out have probably already sold. For contrarian investors, extreme readings like this can mark inflection points.
What Oversold Really Means
Finding oversold stocks doesn't mean you've found guaranteed winners. These three tech companies are cheap for different reasons: Motorola Solutions faces general market skepticism despite strategic acquisitions, Zscaler can't catch a bid despite beating estimates, and Nutanix is dealing with real guidance disappointments.
What an RSI below 30 does tell you is that selling momentum has reached extreme levels. When everyone who wants to sell has sold, sometimes the only direction left is up. December could bring renewed interest in these beaten-down tech names, especially if broader market conditions improve or if these companies deliver positive catalysts.
The opportunity in oversold stocks is real, but so is the risk. These aren't slam dunks—they're calculated bets that the market has overreacted to the downside.