What Is DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit (DBL) Worth in 2026?
According to the CirclFi Deep Alpha Valuation Engine, DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit's intrinsic value is estimated at a composite fair value of $12.06. Trading at $14.11, the stock is approaching fair value or slight overvaluation (implied return of -14.5%), as 4 of 7 models suggest limited further upside. The most optimistic model, First Chicago, places fair value at $17.61 (+24.8%), while Bayesian DCF — the most conservative — estimates $3.79 (-73.2%). This +97.9% gap reflects genuine analytical uncertainty about DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit's intrinsic worth.
What Do the Models Say About DBL?
7 of 13 models are currently active for DBL. Of these, 2 models suggest upside while 5 models suggest overvaluation. The Bayesian DCF estimates DBL's intrinsic value at $3.79, implying -73.2% downside from the current price. See which stocks rank higher →
How Does DBL Rank in —?
DBL operates in the — sector. CirclFi's QOC score of 2.0/10 evaluates 32 fundamental signals. A score of 2.0 signals below-average fundamentals.
DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit operates in a competitive landscape where fundamental quality metrics are key differentiators for long-term value creation.
Is DBL a Value Trap?
The Value Trap algorithm is not active for DBL. The score cross-references apparent undervaluation against fundamental deterioration signals. Browse lowest value-trap stocks →
Multi-Model Methodology
7 of 13 models are active for DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit. Moderate coverage provides meaningful perspective. Each model applies a fundamentally different valuation philosophy. See the complete methodology →
According to the CirclFi Deep Alpha Valuation Engine, DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit scores 2.0 out of 10 on our 32-signal quality assessment, a weak rating that exhibits fundamental weaknesses that warrant careful scrutiny. The QOC score synthesizes profitability margins, revenue growth reliability, debt management, and capital allocation into a single metric designed to separate durable businesses from statistically cheap ones.
The gap between the most bullish and bearish model spans +97.9% — demonstrating why single-model analysis is dangerous. Browse all stocks with 13-model coverage →
Data Sources & Confidence
Every DBL valuation is built from SEC EDGAR XBRL filings — 700+ standardized financial tags. Macroeconomic context from FRED calibrates discount rates, while GDELT news sentiment feeds into our Sentiment SOTP model. All pipelines run daily. Read the complete data methodology →
Across DBL's 7 active models, average confidence is 3%. Lower confidence may reflect limited history or high volatility.
CirclFi's output is a research starting point, not a buy/sell signal. All data updates daily. Read the full methodology →