3 stocks I plan to buy if the stock market crashes in 2026

  • The S&P 500 is trading at the second most expensive valuation in its history right now.

  • Investors should never try to time the market as this often leads to missed gains.

  • However, it can be useful to keep a shortlist of quality stocks to grab if the market stumbles.

  • 10 Stocks We Like More Than Nvidia ›

The stock market is not cheap now. In fact, as my colleague Sean Williams points out, the benchmark S&P 500 the index is trading at the second most expensive valuation in its history, dating back to 1871.

But timing the stock market is virtually impossible, and investors who sit on the sidelines waiting for a correction sometimes miss out on significant gains. Quite simply, there is never a bad time to invest, as long as it is for a long-term period of at least five years, this will reduce the noise and maximize the chances of earning a positive return.

That said, it can be useful to keep a shortlist of quality stocks to add to your portfolio if the broader market hits a bump. Here are three names I plan to collect if there is a crash in 2026.

Image source: Nvidia.

With a market cap of $4.6 trillion, Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) is currently the largest company in the world. Its current 2026 fiscal year will end at the end of January in just a few weeks, and it’s on track to generate record revenues and earnings thanks to incredible demand for its data center chips, which are the world’s best for developing artificial intelligence (AI).

Nvidia is likely to grow even more in fiscal 2027, with the Wall Street consensus estimate (provided by Yahoo! Finance) pointing to total revenue of $319 billion. If the company’s recent operating results are anything to go by, the data center segment will be responsible for around 90% of this figure.

Later this year, Nvidia will release a new range of AI graphics processing units (GPUs) for the data center, which will be based on its new Rubin architecture. These chips could be 3.3 times more powerful than the company’s current Blackwell Ultra chips, so they will be ideal for implementing the latest reasoning models such as OpenAI’s GPT-5, Anthropic’s Claude 4.5, and AlphabetGemini’s 3. So the demand is likely to be astronomical.

Nvidia stock is trading at an attractive valuation as I write this. The price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is 46.7, which is a discount from the 10-year average of 61.3. However, this is still a significant premium to the S&P 500’s P/E, which is 25.4. As a result, I’ll likely be a buyer if the stock gets caught up in a broader market selloff at some point this year.

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