pwshub.com

These 3 Stocks Are Beating Nvidia This Year. Are They Better Buys Than the AI Leader?

Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has been the star of the stock market this year. The artificial intelligence (AI) chip specialist has wowed investors with triple-digit revenue growth and an even faster surge on the bottom line as it drives the generative AI revolution forward.

No other stock in history has added trillions of dollars in market value so fast, and Nvidia even briefly became the most valuable company in the world, topping Apple and Microsoft. Year to date, Nvidia stock has surged 160% -- certainly, an impressive run.

Yet, some stocks have actually beaten the tech powerhouse this year. Keep reading below to see three of them, and whether they can continue to outperform Nvidia.

A stock chart going up.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. Cava Group

Cava Group (NYSE: CAVA) is one of the most impressive restaurant stocks to emerge on the market in years, arguably since Chipotle Mexican Grill. The founder of Panera Bread, Ron Shaich, was an early investor and serves as chair of the board, helping to steer the fast-casual chain toward success.

Cava has also adopted a Chipotle-like menu but with Mediterranean food and a similar minimalist industrial store design. The concept is clearly resonating with customers, according to its results. In the second quarter, Cava reported comparable sales growth of 14.4%, driven by a 9.5% jump in traffic, showing that the concept is catching on.

Its average unit volumes, meaning the average annual revenue per restaurant, improved to $2.7 billion, approaching Chipotle's at $3.1 billion. Cava's restaurant-level profit margin is similarly impressive at 26.5% in the most recent quarter, which compares to 28.9% at Chipotle.

Cava's bottom-line profits are also jumping as net income tripled in the second quarter to $19.7 million. The chain is still small at 341 locations, which should give it a long runway of growth. After the earnings pop last Friday, Cava stock is now 182% this year.

2. Sweetgreen

Another restaurant chain, Sweetgreen (NYSE: SG), has also been a breakout performer this year as the fast-casual salad chain has surged thanks to strong growth numbers and a low share price at the beginning of the year.

Sweetgreen has taken a more circuitous route to its current level than Cava as the stock went public at the peak of the pandemic bubble and then crashed, along with nearly every other growth stock.

Since then, the salad slinger has reassured investors of its potential, delivering both impressive growth and improving restaurant-level profits. It's also introduced a robotic kitchen assistant it calls Infinite Kitchen, which the company says is accelerating throughput and saving on labor costs.

Revenue at Sweetgreen jumped 21% to $184.6 million in the second quarter, driven by same-store sales growth of 9%. Sweetgreen's average unit volume is at $2.9 billion, similar to Chipotle, and its restaurant-level profit margin improved from 20% to 22%.

The company is the leader in the fast-casual salad space, and it also has a lot of room for growth with just around 225 locations currently. Its Infinite Kitchen technology -- an automated system for preparing food -- adds another way for the company to differentiate itself.

So far this year, Sweetgreen stock has jumped 225%.

3. Carvana

Carvana (NYSE: CVNA) has been one of the biggest surprises in the stock market in recent years. The online used-car dealer was left for dead in 2022 as its once-rapid growth came to a halt and the business was on the brink of bankruptcy.

However, through aggressive cost-cutting and stabilization in the used-car market, Carvana has rebounded, and the stock has continued to surge this year, up 194% year to date.

By sharply reducing its inventory and restructuring its debt, Carvana has been able to deliver positive adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) and generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) net income.

Carvana has also returned to unit sales growth and solid revenue growth with sales up 23% in the second quarter.

The online used-car dealer should also benefit from lower interest rates. They would encourage more demand from car buyers and make it easier for Carvana to refinance its debt and lower its interest expense, which is still a significant cost for the company at more than half of its operating income.

Are Cava, Sweetgreen, and Carvana buys?

All three of these stocks have earned their soaring performances this year with Sweetgreen and Carvana falling more into the turnaround category than Cava.

Of the three of them, Cava looks like the most attractive right now as its execution and results have been nearly perfect since its initial public offering and it seems well-positioned to follow the growth path in the fast-casual sector carved out by Chipotle.

Carvana, on the other hand, seems like the riskiest of the stocks as it still carries a substantial debt load and the cyclicality of the used car market can be brutal, though falling interest rates should be a tailwind for the company.

Finally, Sweetgreen is another attractive growth story as a unique concept in the restaurant industry, and Infinite Kitchen could prove to be a key driver of profitability as the company adds it to more locations.

For investors comparing these stocks to Nvidia, it's important to understand that Nvidia's upside potential is likely rather limited at this point. With Nvidia's market capitalization at more than $3 trillion, even for it to gain 50% from here would mean a market value of greater than $4.5 trillion, and no company has ever reached $4 trillion in market value.

That doesn't mean that it can't be done, but if you're looking for the next five-bagger or 10-bagger stock, you're better off shifting your focus away from Nvidia to a smaller growth stock like Cava, Sweetgreen, or Carvana.

Should you invest $1,000 in Cava Group right now?

Before you buy stock in Cava Group, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Cava Group wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $786,169!*

Stock Advisor provides investors with an easy-to-follow blueprint for success, including guidance on building a portfolio, regular updates from analysts, and two new stock picks each month. The Stock Advisor service has more than quadrupled the return of S&P 500 since 2002*.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of August 26, 2024

Jeremy Bowman has positions in Carvana and Chipotle Mexican Grill. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Apple, Chipotle Mexican Grill, Microsoft, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool recommends Cava Group and Sweetgreen and recommends the following options: long January 2026 $395 calls on Microsoft, short January 2026 $405 calls on Microsoft, and short September 2024 $52 puts on Chipotle Mexican Grill. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

These 3 Stocks Are Beating Nvidia This Year. Are They Better Buys Than the AI Leader? was originally published by The Motley Fool

Source: finance.yahoo.com

Related stories
3 weeks ago - Investors are gearing up for a potential rate cut in September and assessing the opportunities in the market to funnel their capital. Dividend stocks are set to be back in action as history suggests they tend to perform well when the Fed...
1 month ago - Microsoft shares have fallen heavily as the software giant reported disappointing results that deepened investors’ fears about the artificial intelligence boom.
4 days ago - The S&P 500 has delivered outstanding returns over the last year and is currently up around 23%. However, the index has returned an average...
3 weeks ago - The chipmaker has been powering the AI revolution, but sometimes strong growth simply isn't enough.
5 hours ago - Dividend investing took a back seat ever since the AI-led craze caused everyone to pile into technology growth stocks. However, long-term investors seeking a stable and reliable income stream always look for strong dividend payers that...
Other stories
10 minutes ago - (Reuters) -Nike said on Thursday that former senior executive Elliott Hill will rejoin the company to succeed John Donahoe as president and CEO, as the sportswear giant shakes up its top rank amid efforts to revive sales and battle rising...
10 minutes ago - Trump maintains a roughly 60% stake in Trump Media & Technology Group, which trades on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol "DJT."
10 minutes ago - FedEx and other transportation firms expanded operations during the pandemic-fueled online shipping boom. The company has been trying to cut billions in overhead costs after demand normalized. In June, FedEx completed a restructuring...
10 minutes ago - On CNBC's “Mad Money Lightning Round,” Jim Cramer said Wells Fargo & Company (NYSE:WFC) is going to go higher, adding that it's a “winner.” On Sept. 17, the San Francisco-based bank launched specialized Application Programming Interfaces...
10 minutes ago - Wall Street has absorbed the Fed's message that a deep cut will prove positive for the economy.