Top tech stocks, including Amazon.com and Google, are looking attractive after the recent market pullback, according to two analysts who sent buy ideas to clients late this week following a broader selloff.

Google Inc. GOOG, -1.97% and Amazon.com AMZN, +0.18% were touted as leading buy ideas by both Morgan Stanley and Cantor Fitzgerald in notes distributed to clients on Friday morning and Thursday, respectively.

Morgan Stanley named those stocks among 25 others it says are “being oversold after the recent market volatility.”

“We can’t point to a specific reason the market fell,” Morgan Stanley wrote. But “our view is this is a buying opportunity.”

Amazon’s limited exposure to the struggling Chinese market was cited as a strength by the Cantor analysts. Google, meanwhile, has virtually “no direct exposure” to China” despite its significant exposure to the global economic downturn.

Shares of Amazon fell slightly to around $516.60 in early afternoon trading. They are up nearly 22% over the last three months, compared with a decline of about 6.3% for the broader S&P 500.

Google’s fell 1.5% to $657.23, though they’re still up 18.5% over the last three months.

Among other large-cap stocks Morgan Stanley thinks are being oversold are Apple Inc. AAPL, +3.03% , Gilead Sciences Inc. GILD, -1.29% , Salesforce.com Inc. CRM, +0.93% , Starbucks Corp. SBUX, -1.24% and Bank of America Corp. BAC, -2.93% .

Shares of Apple have fallen 15% over the last three months, compared with an 8% decline for the broader Dow Jones Industrial Average, partially on concerns about decelerating iPhone sales and the company’s exposure to China.

The iPhone maker, which continues to increase its investment in China, reported a more than doubling in revenue from the Greater China region last quarter to $13.23 billion, though sales from China were down from $16.8 billion in the quarter prior. Data from FactSet shows Apple gets more than 16% of its total revenue from China.

See Also: Apple Watch debut may have been better than earnings suggested

Apple’s exposure to the region prompted CEO Tim Cook to give a rare mid-quarter update on Monday via a personal email to CNBC TV personality Jim Cramer that touted the company’s continued progress in the country.

“Growth in iPhone activations has actually accelerated over the past few weeks, and we have had the best performance of the year for the App Store in China during the last 2 weeks,” Cook said.

See Also:Did Apple CEO Tim Cook violate SEC rules with Jim Cramer email?

On a call with analysts and the press in July, Apple CEO Tim Cook said that economic headwinds in China have not changed the company’s strategy there. He reiterated plans to get to 40 retail stores in the country by the end of next year.