Connect with us

Finance

2 Growth Stocks Making Screaming Buys in the 2024 Bull Market

Avatar

Published

on

2 Growth Stocks Making Screaming Buys in the 2024 Bull Market

The new bull market has given many people a renewed interest in investing. While rapidly rising stock prices may make you nervous if you buy at the wrong time, you can find great companies in any market environment, especially if you invest with a long-term mindset.

If you’re looking for attractive companies that seem like attractive investments right now, here are two top stocks to consider for your portfolio.

1. Duolingo

Duolingo (NASDAQ: DUOL) has capitalized on the size of the language learning market by offering dozens of courses through a comprehensive platform to millions of users around the world. The company focuses on helping language students with personalized lessons and interactive exercises, which they can complete anywhere and at their own pace.

Duolingo uses that process artificial intelligence, machine learningand data analytics to track each individual’s learning journey and tailor lessons to ensure they get the content that’s right for them. The company operates on a freemium model, meaning anyone can access the learning content on Duolingo for free, but additional features and benefits require a subscription.

Based on this model, the company generates revenue from advertising, subscription fees and in-app purchases. It also makes money from the Duolingo English test, which has been adopted by thousands of higher education programs across the country, including Yale, Columbia, Duke and Stanford, as proof of English proficiency.

Moreover, students often stay with the app for months or even years. They can use the free experience for a long time before becoming paying users. This flexible model allows Duolingo to reach all types of learners across budgets and learning goals across a significant total addressable market (TAM). Management estimates its TAM to be in the ballpark of 2 billion people.

In the first quarter, Duolingo reported total bookings of $197.5 million, up 41% year over year, while subscription bookings rose 47% to $161.5 million. It also had 7.4 million paying subscribers at the end of the quarter, up 54% year over year. The total number of daily active users also increased by 54% to 31.4 million.

Duolingo reported net income of $27.0 million on total revenue of $167.6 million. That net figure was a notable improvement from the $2.6 million loss a year ago, while revenue rose 45%. Importantly, the company also has positive cash flow, with operating cash flow and free cash flow for the quarter coming in at $83.5 million and $79.6 million, respectively.

While advertisers may scale back spending and users may hesitate to pay for subscriptions in tough economic conditions, Duolingo’s asset-light, freemium model allows it to tap into a range of revenue streams.

Duolingo stock is up about 50% in the past year. Investors looking for a top growth stock may want to consider this dominant player in the multibillion-dollar language learning market.

2. Toast

Toast (NYSE: TOST) is a cloud-based technology platform for restaurants. The platform offers a wide range of services to help restaurants manage every aspect of their operations, from delivery and takeout to payroll and inventory.

For example, restaurants can use Toast’s point-of-sale (POS) software to reduce the time it takes to take an order and process payments quickly. The multi-location management tool allows users to manage menus across multiple restaurants. The company even helps restaurants grow their business by launching loyalty programs and developing email marketing initiatives.

On the hardware side, the Kitchen Display System allows front-of-house staff to communicate with kitchen staff through integrated order stations, which notify servers when orders are ready and provide mobile alerts. It also offers technology such as guest kiosks, portable POS devices and card readers.

Through this wide variety of offerings, Toast generates revenue from three primary sources: service subscriptions, hardware device sales, and financial technology solutions. The lion’s share of revenue comes from the latter category, especially transaction-based fees from payment processing.

In the first quarter, Toast’s revenue rose 31% year over year to $1.1 billion. The company processed gross payment volume of $34.7 billion this quarter, an increase of 30%. Toast is still operating at a loss, but it generated $125 million in free cash flow last year.

Early shareholders are staring at steep losses, even as shares are up 40% so far this year. Toast has work to do, but with its platform serving 112,000 locations, this market leader is worthy of a buy-and-hold position.

Should You Invest $1,000 in Duolingo Now?

Before you buy shares in Duolingo, consider the following:

The Motley Fool stock advisor The analyst team has just identified what they think is the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Duolingo wasn’t one of them. The ten stocks that survived the cut could deliver monster returns in the coming years.

Think about when Nvidia created this list on April 15, 2005… if you had $1,000 invested at the time of our recommendation, you would have $757,001!*

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

View the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns June 24, 2024

Rachel Warren has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool holds and recommends positions in Duolingo and Toast. The Motley Fool has one disclosure policy.

2 Growth Stocks Making Screaming Buys in the 2024 Bull Market was originally published by The Motley Fool