Double Your Money This Year With These 3 Small-Cap Growth Stocks
Briefly

Double Your Money This Year With These 3 Small-Cap Growth Stocks
"Everyone wishes they had bought companies like Google or NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) before they matured into the behemoths they are today. However, very few are willing to take the risk. The argument behind not doing so is quite rational, since small-cap stocks are going through a rough patch. Stubbornly high interest rates have only barely started to come down, plus investing trends are also against them. Instead of capital finding its way deeper into the market, Wall Street has pulled out of many small-cap stocks and consolidated into a few dozen AI-related big-name stocks."
"Still, abandoning small-cap growth stocks altogether is not a good idea. A small portion of your portfolio dedicated to promising names can pay off significantly if even one successfully breaks into the mainstream. Buying small-cap stocks today gives you a great entry point before further interest rate cuts and changes in Wall Street's investing philosophy lead to a renaissance. Here are three to look into."
"The company makes small robots that can load up on food and other items and then bring them to homes. It also has cameras and makes sure the food is not being stolen. There have been cases where Serve Robotics' footage led to criminal convictions. Serve Robotics has partnered up with Uber Eats. In Q2, it delivered 120 food delivery robots, with the plan to deploy 2,000 robots and then possibly scale exponentially from there."
Small-cap growth stocks have struggled amid stubbornly high interest rates and a flow of capital into a concentrated group of AI-related large caps. Wall Street has pulled back from many smaller companies, creating lower entry points for investors willing to assume risk. Maintaining a small allocation to promising small-cap names can produce large gains if one company achieves mainstream adoption. Serve Robotics exemplifies such potential with deployed food-delivery robots, a partnership with Uber Eats, evidence of real-world utility and safety monitoring, and plans to scale production dramatically—potentially reducing unit costs and expanding deployments as market conditions improve.
Read at 24/7 Wall St.
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