My Favorite Hypergrowth Stock to Buy With $1,000 Right Now

Companies capable of hypergrowth often see their stock prices bid up to outrageous levels. Often, however, shares remain a bargain compared to their long-term potential. Those willing to stomach the high upfront premium can be heavily rewarded if they remain patient.

Even after rising more than 100% since I first pointed out how cheap the shares were, my favorite hypergrowth stock still looks like a bargain compared to its long term potential. Let’s take a closer look.

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Since the year began, I’ve been writing frequently about Nu Holdings (NYSE: NU). Warren Buffett purchased shares for this holding company when the company went public in 2021, and I noticed he had lost hundreds of millions of dollars on this investment over the years that followed. At the time of Nu’s initial public offering (IPO), shares traded at roughly $10. One year after the IPO, they were valued at less than $5.

Buffett isn’t often wrong about companies, so I decided to take a closer look. What I found amazed me. Not only was Nu one of the fastest-growing companies I’d looked at in years, but its potential growth trajectory was truly impressive.

Let’s back up a bit to review what exactly Nu does. Many readers have never heard of the company before today, and for good reason — Nu operates exclusively in Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia. So unless you live in one of those countries, or just happened to have come across Nu in your stock investment research, it’s likely you know very little about this amazing business.

At its core, Nu is a fintech company. That means it operates in the financial sector, known for its massive addressable markets — but also that it, in actuality, operates more like a technology company, capable of growth rates most financial businesses would be enviable of.

When the company was founded in 2016, its primary goal was to disrupt Latin America’s old-school banking industry. At the time, the financial sector was dominated by a handful of incumbent banks operating out of physical branches. Nu turned the industry upside down by offering its services directly through a smartphone. This approach allowed it to scale rapidly, pushing new financial services to customers at the touch of a button while reducing overhead costs, with part of those savings passed along to its customers.

Nu’s growth has been impressive. Over the past decade, it has gone from essentially zero customers to more than 100 million. More than half of all Brazilian adults are now Nu customers. The company’s growth runway in Mexico and Colombia is much longer than in Brazil, Nu’s first and oldest market. And with more than 650 million residents living across more than a dozen other Latin American countries, Nu’s long-term growth is likely just getting started.

Forget Dogecoin And Shiba Inu — This Meme Coin Skyrockets After Coinbase Hints At Possible Listing

Dogecoin DOGE/USD rival meme coin Floki FLOKI/USD has experienced a significant surge in value. This comes on the heels of an announcement by Coinbase, a leading US crypto exchange, about the potential inclusion of FLOKI in its future listings.

What Happened: Coinbase has disclosed its consideration of adding FLOKI to its listing roadmap. This roadmap is a tool used by the exchange for maintaining transparency and preventing insider trading on coins prior to their listing.

Following this announcement, FLOKI’s value experienced a sharp increase, rising from $0.000217 last week to a peak of $0.000280 within a matter of hours. At the time of writing, FLOKI is trading at $0.000239.

FLOKI, which was launched in 2021, is a utility token for the Floki ecosystem. Inspired by Elon Musk‘s pet Shiba Inu SHIB/USD, the Floki ecosystem provides a range of decentralized finance (DeFi) services on the Ethereum ETH and Base blockchains.

Also Read: Here’s How A Bitcoin Whale Nets $179M From A $120 Investment

Why It Matters: The potential listing of FLOKI on Coinbase is a significant development for the memecoin.

Earlier last week, crypto analyst Bluntz predicted a substantial rise for FLOKI, forecasting that it could potentially surpass the $0.0005 level in the long term, which is more than double its current value.

The recent surge in FLOKI’s value following Coinbase’s announcement seems to validate this prediction.

The potential listing on a major exchange like Coinbase could provide FLOKI with increased visibility and credibility in the crypto market, potentially driving further increases in its value.

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Should You Forget Coca-Cola? Why These Unstoppable Stocks Are Better Buys.

There’s nothing wrong with Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) as a company. In fact, it has a storied past and likely a bright future. But Wall Street is well aware of how attractive an investment Coca-Cola is, leaving it as what appears to be a fully priced stock today (and most of the time).

It does only one thing: make beverages (although it does this very well). So if you are looking at Coca-Cola, you might want to consider direct competitor PepsiCo (NASDAQ: PEP) or shift gears and look at Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG). Here’s why.

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Coke’s biggest strength is that it is a dominant beverage maker. It benefits from the distribution prowess, marketing skill, and innovation capabilities that come along with its size.

But this strength is also a weakness, since Coca-Cola’s business is anything but diversified. Sure, you could argue that it makes different kinds of beverages, but beverages are the name of the game just the same.

At the end of the day, beverages are just one tiny niche of the broader consumer staples sector. Which is why you might want to take a look at PepsiCo, one of Coca-Cola’s primary competitors in the beverage niche.

PepsiCo adds a dominant position in salty snacks (Frito-Lay) and a substantial packaged food business (Quaker Oats). This diversification can help to smooth financial performance over time. That may limit gains to some degree, but if there’s a problem in the beverage business, it won’t derail PepsiCo as it might Coca-Cola.

Meanwhile, Coke’s price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) is roughly equal to its five-year average. PepsiCo’s P/E is a bit more than 5% below its five-year average at this writing. And its 3.3% dividend yield is a touch higher than Coca-Cola’s 3.1%. So PepsiCo looks a little cheaper, offers a little more yield, and has a much more diversified business. That should be attractive to more conservative investors.

There’s another direction that investors can go, and that’s to focus on the broader consumer staples sector. If you do that, then dominant companies like Procter & Gamble can be brought into consideration.

P&G makes consumable goods that people use every day and buy regularly. It has leading positions in products like toothpaste, laundry detergent, toilet paper, paper towels, deodorant, and diapers, to name just a few. If you are a fan of diversification, P&G offers you that in grand fashion, noting that it tends to play at the high end of the product categories in which it competes.

'It Sounds Like a Relationship Issue:' Ramsey Show Hosts On Father's $100K Paycut And 3,000-Mile Move

'It Sounds Like a Relationship Issue:' Ramsey Show Hosts On Father's $100K Paycut And 3,000-Mile Move
‘It Sounds Like a Relationship Issue:’ Ramsey Show Hosts On Father’s $100K Paycut And 3,000-Mile Move

A recent episode of The Ramsey Show had hosts Rachel Cruze and George Kamel tackling a tough financial and relational dilemma. A caller, Jeremy from Ottawa, Canada, reached out for advice after taking a drastic pay cut and moving his family 3,000 miles to be closer to his partner’s family. His income dropped from over $150,000 to under $50,000, leaving him struggling to cover bills and support his children.

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Jeremy asked, “I wanna know if it makes me a deadbeat father if I move back to my old job.”

Despite his good intentions to move closer to his family, Jeremy made it clear that they are struggling financially. He also expressed that his partner has further reduced her hours at her job, lowering their income even further.

As Kamel and Cruze questioned Jeremy about his situation, it became clear that he and his partner approach finances very differently and separately. Jeremy handles major expenses like the mortgage and one of their cars, while his partner manages other costs independently from him. They don’t combine their finances or share details about monthly expenses.

Cruze stated, “It’s sounding more like a relationship issue, Jeremy. It sounds like you guys aren’t generally doing well as a couple.” She noted that money concerns may be a symptom of their struggles, but a bigger problem within their relationship is not being addressed.

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Kamel suggested that Jeremy might need a “come to Jesus” conversation with his partner to address their financial and relationship strains. He stated that they need to lay it all out, clarify that they are not doing well financially and come together to discuss a plan to move forward.

“That’s what it’s going to take,” Kamel said. “And that’s when we lay out the finances together, get on a budget together and figure out what the hole is and how we’re getting out of it. And that might mean you need to find a higher paying job, she needs to work more hours, we need to combine bank accounts.”

Cruze reiterated these points, encouraging Jeremy to sit down with his partner to determine their minimum income to cover bills and how they can best achieve that. Cruze and Kamel both stressed that if Jeremy wants to make his relationship work, he and his partner must come together to solve their financial struggles – ideally with him staying close rather than moving 3,000 miles away from his family.

IBM CEO on Trump: ‘Less regulation, more innovation’ is a win for business

Tech executives may be warming to Donald Trump’s return to the White House as his quick win sparks optimism for more spending and dealmaking.

“Business does a lot better when uncertainty goes away,” IBM (IBM) CEO Arvind Krishna told me at Yahoo Finance’s Invest conference. “We are hopeful that there is going to be a lot more innovation and less regulation. Those are both good for businesses across the board.”

Krishna believes a lighter regulatory environment will prompt clients to make investment decisions more quickly and also lay the groundwork for a more favorable deal environment.

“If we have more certainty on the outcome, then we are willing to lean into things like M&A … If the regulatory process and antitrust are going to be more certain, that allows you to take more risk,” Krishna added.

IBM CEO Arvind Krishna (left) with Yahoo Finance anchor Seana Smith (right) at the Yahoo Finance Invest conference on Nov. 12, 2024.
IBM CEO Arvind Krishna (left) with Yahoo Finance anchor Seana Smith (right) at the Yahoo Finance Invest conference on Nov. 12, 2024.

A shift toward less regulation would be a dramatic change for the industry, which has faced intense scrutiny from the Biden administration. Under FTC Chair Lina Khan’s leadership, regulators aggressively pursued cases against the industry’s biggest companies, including Amazon (AMZN), Apple (AAPL), Meta (META), and Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL).

Trump, on the other hand, has promised to cut excess red tape, including his promise to throw out Biden’s executive order aimed at putting safety guardrails on AI — a move that would be viewed as controversial by those within the industry.

While Trump’s antitrust agendas remain uncertain, there seems to be growing optimism that he’ll employ a more hands-off approach compared to Biden.

“We expect tech stocks to rally further into year-end as the Street further digests a less regulatory spider web under Trump with Khan/FTC days in the rear view mirror, stronger AI initiatives within the Beltway on the way, and a goldilocks foundation for Big Tech and Tesla looking into 2025 and beyond,” Wedbush’s Dan Ives wrote in a recent note to clients.

Cisco (CSCO) CFO Scott Herren is confident in the company’s momentum heading into 2025. He told me on Yahoo Finance’s Catalysts that he feels “really good” about Cisco’s position, noting “strength across the board.”

“It’s hard to predict what’s going to happen from a political standpoint, but when you look at the things that are going to drive government efficiency, we’ve got the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) that’s about increasing productivity, and technology is always going to be critical to increasing productivity,” Herren said.

Despite optimism from tech leaders, investor sentiment seems a bit more cautious. Performance of the Magnificent Seven stocks, outside of Tesla (TSLA), has been lackluster since Election Day, hampered by risks associated with a stronger dollar and more tariffs.

Leavitt Set To Become Youngest-Ever White House Press Secretary

At just 27, Karoline Leavitt is set to make history as the youngest-ever White House press secretary under Donald Trump‘s next administration.

Trump is betting big on Leavitt, calling her sharp, tough, and a communications powerhouse who’ll be key in amplifying his “Make America Great Again” message from the podium, reported BBC.

According to Politico, Leavitt’s appointment as press secretary is all set, since the staff post does not require Senate confirmation.

A native of New Hampshire, Leavitt’s career in communications began during her time at Saint Anselm College, where she studied communications and political science. While still in school, she interned at Fox News and in Trump’s White House press office, which sparked her interest in press relations.

Also Read: Obama-Era State Secretary Warns Trump’s Plans To Withdraw From Paris Agreement Would ‘Cede Leadership To China’

Leavitt joined the Trump administration in 2019 as a presidential speechwriter before transitioning to assistant press secretary, BBC noted. She worked closely with Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany to prepare for high-pressure briefings and advocated against what she saw as biased media coverage.

After leaving the White House, Leavitt served as communications director for Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.). In 2022, she ran for Congress in New Hampshire’s first district, securing the Republican nomination but ultimately losing in the general election.

In January 2024, Leavitt rejoined Trump’s campaign for the 2024 presidential election as press secretary.

Now, she is set to take on the iconic role of White House press secretary, following in the footsteps of past Trump administration spokespeople like Sean Spicer, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, and McEnany.

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Yes, stocks are crazy expensive right now. These 5 charts show just how extreme valuations have become.

There’s no getting around it. Shares of America’s largest companies have been looking pretty expensive lately.

The thinking holds whether looking at valuation metrics based on corporate earnings over the past decade, or Wall Street’s expectations for profits and sales over the coming year. Major gauges for measuring how expensive stocks have become, relative to their fundamentals — including the earnings and sales these companies stand to reap — send a similar message: Prices for U.S. large-cap stocks haven’t been this elevated since at least 2021. That was right before the bull market that followed the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic reached a peak.

For many investors, high valuations can be reason enough to question whether stocks look like a smart buy at current prices. But strategists who spoke with MarketWatch also offered a word of caution: just because stocks look expensive, doesn’t mean they can’t get more expensive.

“What we’ve found is that valuations aren’t a particularly good timing indicator,” said Rob Haworth, senior investment strategist at U.S. Bank, during an interview with MarketWatch.

Keep that in mind while perusing the five charts below, which offer a picture of some of the most commonly used metrics employed by financial analysts.

The CAPE ratio, or cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio, compares the price of a stock (or index) to average earnings over the previous decade, while taking care to adjust for inflation.

It was developed by Robert Shiller, an American economist and a Nobel Prize laureate in economics.

For the S&P 500 SPX, the ratio rose as high as 38.11 in November, its highest level since late 2021, according to data featured on a website maintained by Shiller. Prior to that, it has only been higher around the peak of the dot-com bubble.

The forward price-to-sales ratio also has been giving investors dot-com-era vibes.

The level of the S&P 500 compared with its member firms’ expected earnings over the coming year rose as high as 2.98 earlier this month. At that level, it has surpassed its recent highs from 2021, and was nearing its record peak north of 3 from the summer of 2000.

Most equity strategists consider a price-to-sales ratio above 3 to be extremely expensive.

However, individual stocks also trade at many times that level, including Palantir Inc. PLTR, which recently boasted a forward price-to-sales ratio just shy of 40, according to FactSet data.

Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers, said that in some ways, price-to-sales offers a more accurate picture of a stock’s valuation.

That’s because companies have far less discretion to make adjustments to raw revenue numbers.

“It’s easier for companies to massage their earnings than it is to massage revenues or cash flows,” Sosnick told MarketWatch during an interview.

This was, perhaps, the most widely used of the metrics included here.

The forward price-to-earnings ratio for the S&P 500 crossed above 22 in November for the first time since 2021, Dow Jones Market Data showed. This means stocks were richly valued relative to the profits these firms were expected to generate over the next 12 months.

Relative to the size of the U.S. economy, stocks have never been more expensive.

Taken together, every stock in the S&P 500 was worth 1.7 times the entire U.S. gross domestic product as of the end of the third quarter this past week.

Some call this “the Buffett Indicator,” although we should clarify that the standard version of the Buffett Indicator uses the Wilshire 5000, an index that captures all actively traded U.S. stocks, rather than the S&P 500.

But given that the S&P 500 captures the majority of total U.S. stock-market value, there lately has been very little daylight between the two ratios.

The indicator got its name from a comment Berkshire Hathaway Chief Executive Officer Warren Buffett once made to a reporter years ago, when he said that comparing the market capitalization of all U.S. stocks to the size of the U.S. economy offered the clearest picture of where valuations stand at any given moment.

However, the “Oracle of Omaha” has since distanced himself from his namesake indicator. One of Buffett’s assistants told MarketWatch a few months ago that throughout his adult life, Buffett has cautioned against trying to predict stock-market behavior.

Recently, some investors have been paying more attention to another Buffett indicator — the man himself. Berkshire’s decision to sell some stocks and build up its cash reserves has made some on Wall Street nervous.

Cash and equivalents, plus short-term U.S. Treasury investments, held by the conglomerate rose to $325.2 billion in the third quarter, a record high.

But before panic sets in, it’s worth pointing out that increases in Berkshire’s cash holdings have had little predictive power for markets in the past, according to one stock-market strategist.

Compared with historically elevated returns investors can reap from holding Treasurys backed entirely by the U.S. government, stocks may no longer offer a compelling return, given the additional risk.

At least, in theory.

The equity risk premium, which compares the S&P 500’s expected earnings yield with the actual yield on the 10-year Treasury note BX:TMUBMUSD10Y, slumped to its lowest level since 2002 this week, according to MarketWatch’s calculations.

While a negative premium suggests more risk-averse investors might want to stick with Treasurys and steer clear of stocks, the “ERP” in the past has remained in deeply negative territory for years, while the stock market kept on climbing. That was the case in the late 1990s, and it remained in negative territory as stocks tumbled after the dot-com bubble burst.

More conservative strategists have been howling about the decline in the ERP largely since the bull-market began. Its decline since the start of 2022 has mostly been driven by a rise in Treasury yields to levels last since before the 2008 financial crisis.

Moreover, while many stocks look expensive, it doesn’t mean investors can’t still find a good deal.

Small-cap and mid-cap stocks still look relatively cheap, several strategists told MarketWatch. Underperforming S&P 500 sectors remain, like healthcare stocks, materials and real-estate investment trusts.

But before diving into the bargain bin, it’s worth considering that the higher valuations of today might actually be justified. Some analysts think comparing today’s stock market to the market of yesteryear simply doesn’t make much sense.

That’s because, since the 1990s, the technology boom unleashed by the internet has changed many aspects of the U.S. economy.

And as long as companies like Microsoft Corp. MSFT, Apple Inc. AAPL and Nvidia Corp. NVDA can defend the sizable moats surrounding their businesses and continue growing earnings at a solid pace, investors have good reason to pay a premium for their shares, according to Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research.

Indeed, many of the biggest companies in the S&P 500 boast wider profit margins and lower debt than their predecessors from decades past. These firms tend to be “asset light,” meaning they don’t require heavy investment in factories and other capital goods. Because of this, their earnings have been much more stable from quarter to quarter.

All of this helps to justify higher earnings multiples, according to Ohsung Kwon, a strategist at Bank of America global research.

“Yes, valuations are more expensive today versus historical levels for sure,” Kwon said. “But there are reasons why multiples should be higher.”

Mike DeStefano contributed reporting

Down 98%, Is It Time to Buy Spirit Airlines Stock?

Just like airplanes take off and land, shares of Spirit Airlines (NYSE: SAVE) have taken shareholders on a ride. Only in this instance, there has been ridiculous amounts of turbulence on the journey.

The business has made for a terrible investment. This airline stock currently trades 98% off its all-time high, a milestone that was achieved nearly 10 years ago. At this beaten-down level, is it time to buy Spirit Airlines?

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Things briefly reversed course recently. From Oct. 18 to Nov. 11, shares of the troubled airline surged 131% higher. The company initially gave shareholders a sigh of relief when it said it was able to secure an extension with bondholders to refinance its debt.

Earlier this year, Spirit Airlines’ planned merger with JetBlue Airways was called off by a federal judge due to concerns that it would’ve lowered competition at the lower end of the airline industry. The stock tanked tremendously after the announcement.

There was hope that a new deal was in the works, adding to Spirit shares’ recent short-lived bounce-back. The business was in talks recently with Frontier Group about a possible merger. But the discussions fell through.

This puts Spirit Airlines in a precarious situation. The company is expected to file for bankruptcy protection in the not-too-distant future. It has also revealed that it won’t be able to file its Q3 2024 10-Q on time.

Investors might have been encouraged by the market’s renewed sense of optimism toward Spirit Airlines, but that has dissipated. I believe it’s still extremely difficult to be bullish on the business or the stock, even though the shares trade at a dirt-cheap price-to-sales multiple of 0.03. In my view, this is a classic value trap. But that valuation shows just how much the market has soured on Spirit’s prospects.

The challenges are hard to ignore. For starters, the company is struggling to grow its revenue. Sales totaled under $1.3 billion in Q2 (ended June 30), down 10.6% year over year. This was the fourth straight quarter of a year-over-year top-line decline.

“Significant industry capacity increases together with ancillary pricing changes” were called out by the management team as key factors pressuring the top line. Spirit’s strategy centers on charging travelers for various non-fare items, like seat selection, baggage, or food and beverage. But the competitive nature of the industry has forced the company to cut prices here.