ORLA Plunges 22%, Should You Consider Buying The Dip?

ORLA: Orla Mining logo
ORLA
Orla Mining

Orla Mining stock has fallen by 22.0% in less than a month, from levels of $12.63 on 7/22/2025 to $9.85 now. Should you buy this dip? Dip buying is a viable strategy for quality stocks that have a history of recovering from dips.
 
As it turns out, Orla Mining passes basic quality checks and has returned (median) 45% in one year, and 44% as peak return following sharp dips (>30% in 30 days) historically. ORLA acquires, explores, and develops mineral properties focused on gold, silver, zinc, lead, and copper, including a 100% interest in a 163,129-hectare project with seven concessions.

Price behaviour is one thing, but what do the fundamentals say? Read Buy or Sell ORLA Stock to see the full picture.
 
That said, if you seek upside with lower volatility than individual stocks, the Trefis High Quality portfolio presents an alternative – having outperformed the S&P 500 and generated returns exceeding 91% since its inception.
 
Historical Median Returns Post Dips
 

Period Past Median Return
1M 3.3%
3M 16.1%
6M 23.1%
12M 44.6%

 
Historical Dip-Wise Details
 
ORLA had 4 events since 1/1/2020 where the dip threshold of -30% within 30 days was triggered

  • 44% median peak return within 1 year of dip event
  • 248 days is the median time to peak return after a dip event
  • -14% median max drawdown within 1 year of dip event

Relevant Articles
  1. GE Aerospace Stock Surged 60%, Here’s Why
  2. How UiPath Stock Gained 60%
  3. How Caterpillar Stock Gained 70%
  4. Pure Storage Stock To $50?
  5. Can Best Buy Stock Recover If Markets Fall?
  6. Intel Stock Drop Looks Sharp, But How Deep Can It Go?

30 Day Dip ORLA Subsequent Performance
Date ORLA SPY 1Y Peak
Return
Max
Drop
# Days
to Peak
Median     45% 44% -14% 248
10042023 -33% -3% 37% 44% -14% 230
6302022 -33% -7% 52% 78% -13% 266
2172021 -33% 6% -1% 29% -20% 100
3132020 -33% -18% 246%   -5% 298

 
Orla Mining Passes Basic Financial Quality Checks
 
Revenue growth, profitability, cash flow, and balance sheet strength need to be evaluated to reduce the risk of a dip being the sign of a deteriorating business situation.

Quality Metrics Value Quality Check
Revenue Growth (LTM) 67.1% Pass
Revenue Growth (3-Yr Avg) 152.3% Pass
Operating Cash Flow Margin (LTM) 133.7% Pass
Leverage (see below) Pass
=> Interest Coverage Ratio 14.9  
=> Cash To Interest Expense Ratio 24.7  

 
Dip buying, while attractive, needs to be evaluated carefully from multiple angles. Such multi-factor analysis is exactly how we construct Trefis portfolio strategies. If you want upside with a smoother ride than an individual stock, consider the High Quality portfolio, which has outperformed the S&P, and clocked >91% returns since inception.