U.S. equity benchmarks remain richly valued, and a growing chorus of strategists is reminding retail investors that single-country exposure has historically been a portfolio risk. For investors scanning for non-U.S. revenue streams without paying up for crowded mega-caps, the under-$60 bucket is where some of the most globally diversified businesses currently trade. The opportunity is timely: a weaker dollar, shifting tariff regimes, and re-rated emerging-market commodity names have quietly pushed several international ADRs into more attractive territory.
With that in mind, here are three stocks trading under $60 that offer meaningful exposure outside the United States, with the fundamentals and analyst coverage to back the thesis.
Gerdau (NYSE: GGB)
Gerdau (NYSE:GGB) is a Brazilian long-steel producer with significant operations across the Americas, including a substantial North American footprint. Shares closed at $4.63 on May 18, 2026, putting the stock well within reach for retail investors building a basket of ex-U.S. names. The shares are up 27.18% year to date and 70.63% over the past year.
Fundamentals support the thesis. Gerdau trades at a forward P/E of 7 with a 3.14% dividend yield and an analyst target price of $5.07. In Q1 2026, North America delivered 75% of consolidated adjusted EBITDA on revenue of $9.35 billion (+6.6% YoY), with margins benefiting from Section 232 tariff adjustments. JPMorgan and UBS raised price targets after the earnings report despite a headline EPS miss.
The bull case is straightforward: a hard-asset, Americas-wide steel franchise priced at less than one times book that throws off cash. The key risk is Brazilian import competition, with flat steel imports hitting 34% penetration in February and Brazil EBITDA compressed by 47.3% in the quarter. For investors looking beyond U.S.-only steel names, Gerdau remains a credible diversifier.
Unilever (NYSE: UL)
Unilever (NYSE:UL | UL Price Prediction) is a London-headquartered consumer staples giant selling Dove, Hellmann’s, Knorr, and Vaseline across 190-plus countries. Shares finished at $57.30, comfortably under the $60 ceiling and down 10.87% year to date, which is exactly the kind of pullback long-term staples buyers tend to look for.
The setup is attractive. Unilever carries a forward P/E of 16, a 4.05% dividend yield, and an analyst target of $67.89. The company posted 2025 revenue of $50.50 billion with full-year operating margin of 20.0% (+60 bps) and FY25 net income of $6.21 billion. Management has guided 2026 underlying sales growth toward the bottom end of its 4-6% range and launched a new €1.5 billion buyback starting Q2 2026.
The bull case rests on geographic breadth: roughly half of revenue comes from emerging markets, providing FX and growth exposure unavailable in U.S.-centric staples peers. The risks are real, including 5.9% FX headwinds, a softer Latin American consumer, and ongoing China macro pressure. Even so, a 4% dividend yield on a defensive global franchise priced below $60 is a tangible diversification tool.
Vale (NYSE: VALE)
Vale (NYSE:VALE) is a Brazilian mining major and one of the world’s largest producers of iron ore, copper, and nickel. Shares closed at $16.31, putting them 25.17% higher year to date and 75.23% above year-ago levels.
Vale trades at a forward P/E of 8, with a sub-1 PEG, a sizable trailing dividend yield of 33.5% reflecting elevated distributions, and an analyst target of $17.22. Q1 26 EPS of $0.44 missed the $0.50 consensus, but Vale Base Metals EBITDA doubled to $1.20 billion as copper realized prices climbed 48% YoY to $13,143 per tonne.
The bull case is copper- and nickel-driven optionality on top of a still-dominant iron ore franchise, with the Serra Sul +20 project at 86% progress and a $1.0 billion extraordinary dividend already paid in January 2026. Risks include BRL appreciation, net debt expanding to $17.8 billion, and $4.1 billion in remaining Brumadinho/Samarco reparations. For investors comfortable with commodity cyclicality, Vale offers direct exposure to non-U.S. resource demand.
The Bottom Line
These three names are priced affordably while offering meaningful non-U.S. revenue, fundamentally distinct business mixes, and explicit analyst support. Investors should weigh currency exposure, commodity cycles, and country-specific tax and tariff regimes before committing capital, and run the numbers against their existing portfolio concentration.