Top 10 Growth Stocks
The fastest-growing companies ranked by revenue growth, earnings growth, and valuation reasonableness. These stocks show strong momentum — but high growth often comes with higher volatility and risk.
| # | Ticker | Company | Price | Rev Growth |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | PLTR | Palantir Technologies Inc. $366.4B | $153.19 | 70.0% |
| 2 | DUOL | Duolingo, Inc. $4.4B | $96.17 | 35.0% |
| 3 | NVDA | NVIDIA Corporation $4.45T | $183.04 | 73.2% |
| 4 | KEY | KeyCorp $22.6B | $20.71 | 131.5% |
| 5 | D | Dominion Energy, Inc. $55.0B | $62.57 | 20.4% |
| 6 | HUBS | HubSpot, Inc. $14.7B | $278.59 | 20.4% |
| 7 | APP | AppLovin Corporation $163.2B | $482.81 | 65.9% |
| 8 | ALLY | Ally Financial Inc. $12.5B | $40.41 | 12.0% |
| 9 | AVGO | Broadcom Inc. $1.51T | $317.53 | 16.4% |
| 10 | BG | Bunge Global SA $22.3B | $115.01 | 75.5% |
⚠️ Important: High growth stocks can be volatile. A high forward P/E means the market expects continued rapid growth — if growth slows, the stock can drop significantly. Always diversify and do your own research. This is not financial advice.
Understanding Growth Investing
Revenue Growth
Year-over-year revenue increase. Companies growing revenue above 20% annually are typically considered high-growth.
Earnings Growth
How fast profits are growing. Strong earnings growth combined with revenue growth signals a healthy, scaling business.
Forward P/E
Price relative to expected future earnings. A lower forward P/E for a high-growth stock suggests it may be undervalued relative to its growth.