SELECT LANGUAGE BELOW

Two of Robinhood’s Top 10 Stocks Are Recommended Buys According to Wall Street

Two of Robinhood's Top 10 Stocks Are Recommended Buys According to Wall Street

Robinhood, the online brokerage that famously made commission-free trading a norm, has become synonymous with meme stocks and high-risk investments. Yet, they reveal that the ten most-held stocks by their users include: Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Tesla, Nvidia, Palantir, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, Netflix, and Ford Motor Company.

All of these stocks, except Palantir, are generally regarded as blue-chip. While many Robinhood investors are still drawn to promising tech stocks, it appears not everyone is leaning toward the volatile meme stock scene, such as GameStop.

Looking specifically at these stocks, two have garnered the most Buy ratings from Wall Street analysts—Alphabet and Amazon, currently tied at 58 Buy ratings. So, why are these two stocks considered standout choices, and are they still a sound investment in the current market?

Alphabet’s Google dominates key areas like search engines, mobile operating systems, web browsers, and video streaming. Additionally, they have robust offerings in cloud infrastructure and productivity software, with their new Gemini generative AI platform rapidly gaining traction.

This extensive ecosystem positions Google well to capitalise on the growth in digital advertising, cloud services, and AI. They provide a rich source of data for tailored advertising and AI offerings, which can be bundled together, making it harder for smaller rivals to compete. Despite facing ongoing scrutiny from antitrust regulators, Google has withstood various legal challenges over the last decade.

Although targeted advertising remains a primary revenue source, Google is diversifying with subscription services like Google One and YouTube Premium. Their Google Cloud platform is also expanding quickly as businesses upgrade their cloud systems for generative AI capabilities.

Analysts predict that Alphabet’s revenue and earnings per share (EPS) will increase at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15% and 12%, respectively, over the next few years. The current price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is around 26x, which seems reasonable given the potential growth in the cloud and AI sectors.

Amazon stands as the largest player in both e-commerce and cloud infrastructure. Although a considerable part of its revenue comes from retail, most profits are actually sourced from Amazon Web Services (AWS), which leads in cloud solutions.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Telegram
WhatsApp

Related News