Top 6 Stocks To Buy Heavy Right Now over the Mag 7! (Massive Upside Potential!)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U3Hp86-lwEw
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Analyzed
Solicitado Em
June 24, 2026 at 06:00 AM
Desempenho Geral
+12,32%
Recomendações
META
BUY
"our community members have Meta as a buy right now on average"
Contexto: So, let's go look at their eight pillars real quick. And by the way, our community members have Meta as a buy right now on average.
Preço na data de publicação: $562,20
Preço de fechamento do último dia: $631,48
(Jul 10, 2026)
Lucro/Perda:
+$69,28
(+12,32%)
META
BUY
"our community members have this as a buy"
Contexto: Other things, lower debt, buying back shares, and our and our community members have this as a buy.
Preço na data de publicação: $562,20
Preço de fechamento do último dia: $631,48
(Jul 10, 2026)
Lucro/Perda:
+$69,28
(+12,32%)
Transcrição Completa
Guys, there's a brand new list of stocks taking over Wall Street. It's not Fang. It's not the Magnificent 7. It is now called Mangoes. Six companies that some people are now calling the future of the entire stock market. Have you heard this before? But here's the crazy part. You can't even buy two of them yet. So, what are they? And why is everyone suddenly obsessed? And should you actually care? So, let's break that down right now. First, let's understand what's really going on here because Wall Street loves to do this. Every few years they take the hottest stocks and they put them and squeeze them into one catchy nickname. It makes a great headline and it gives people something simple to buy and brag about. It started back around 2013 with Fang, something actually coined by Jim Kramer. For those who don't know, that stood for Facebook, which is now Meta, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, and Google. Those were the big technology winners of the 2010s and early 2020s. the companies arriving the wave of success in the world of the internet. Then a few years ago 2023 a new list took over and pushed Fang aside. It was the Magnificent 7 or the Mag 7 for short. That group was Apple Microsoft Alphabet Amazon Nvidia, Meta, and Tesla. For the last several years, these seven giant companies basically carried the entire stock market on their backs. When people said the market is up, what they really meant a lot of the time was these seven stocks are up. And now here we are in 2026 and there is a third list showing up to replace the magnificent 7 once and for all. It's called Mangoes. Notice the pattern and how these lists change. Each new one drops some of the old winners which people become bored with and add the new names that fit the hottest theme of the moment. Fang was about the internet. Mag 7 was about big tech driving the success of stocks as a whole and mangoes it's almost pure artificial intelligence. Now here's why these lists get so famous in the first place. The returns being on one of these lists usually means you've had huge gains and that's exactly why a new list grabs everyone's attention. So let's actually look at the numbers because we did the research. So guys, here are the fang returns right here. February 2013 to May 2023. So over 10 years, Netflix started at 269. This is all split adjusted. Ended at 40 bucks. A total return of 1369% annualized at 30%. Apple, Meta, Amazon, Alphabet, Google. Guys, the worst one was a 19% annualized return over a 10year period. That is insane. Absolutely crazy. Equal weight fang basket return. And what this means is if you put all of these in February 2013 and you own them equally 10,000 of each, whatever number it is, you were up 955% or about 25.8% annualized. Now guys, if you've been watching our channel for a while, you will know that when Fang was out and huge, we sat there and said it'll be something else once people get over this. Then the Magnificent 7 came out and we said the same thing, guys. The three guarantees in life, death, taxes, and cycles. The death and tax is always known. I added cycles. People always cycle in and out of companies based on what's going on with the stock price. I want you to remember this going forward. We will always fluctuate in and out of investments based on what's the most recent hot items. So guys, Mag 7 from May 2023 till June 2026, which is right now Nvidia Google Meta Amazon Tesla, Apple, Microsoft. The worst return actually was Microsoft at 5.6% annualized. The best one was Nvidia. Huge returns all the way up to 75.6%. The equal weight mag 7 basket was 35.4% annualized. Now granted, it's only over a three-year period versus the fang stocks which were a 10-year period. The one thing to keep in mind, by the time the hype has caught on, they've attached the name, how much of these returns have already happened. So, even if you bought it, just like we always say about Kathy Wood, Arc Investment, yes, she might be up from the beginning of her fund, but the vast majority of investors lost money with her. Why? Because they bought after the hype already happened. That's something to always keep in mind, guys. Whenever you're talking about hype, it becomes the hype after the big gains have already been reached. Now, you've seen these outside returns, but what about the new hot names? These six companies that make up MGOS, they are Meta, Anthropic, Nvidia, Google, OpenAI, and SpaceX. And let me quickly tell you what each one is in case some of them are new to you. Meta runs Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp. Anthropic is the AI company behind Claude chatbot. Many of you likely use in some aspect of life. Guys, I love Claude. Nvidia makes the chips that power almost all of artificial intelligence. Google, Alphabet runs search, YouTube, cloud computing, and a ton of AI. Open AAI is the company behind Chat GPT, the first dominant AIcentric company. And SpaceX is the one that just went public two weeks ago. It is Elon Musk's rocket. and Starlink Internet Company, which just IPOed. Add them all together and you're talking about trillions of dollars of value in just six names. And this isn't just a fun internet meme, guys. This is becoming official. Big US money managers are reportedly moving on from the old Fang and Magnificent 7 labels and switching to mangoes. And the companies that build ETFs are already preparing products to track this exact group, especially now that Open AI and Enthropic are getting ready to go public. And guys, a quick reminder for new investors, an ETF is merely a basket of stocks bundled into one. So, you can buy the whole group in a single click instead of buying each individual stock one by one. You also can buy it and trade it like a stock versus a mutual fund, which you have to wait till the end of the closing days and usually has big fees. So, when you hear ETF companies are building a Mangoes product, it means they want to sell you all six in one easy, neat package. Hold that thought, though, because it's about to get very interesting. So, why now? Why are people suddenly ditching the Mag 7 for a new list? The answer is simple. The Magnificent 7 is splitting apart when it comes to returns as of late. For years, those seven stocks moved up together almost like one big team. That's not exactly happening anymore. So far in 2026, the group has cracked right down the middle. On one side, you got Nvidia and Google and they're leading and they're going up. On the other side, Microsoft, Tesla, and Meta are lagging very poorly. There's a number that measures this and it's called dispersion. Now, don't let that word scare you. It just means it's the gap between the best and the worst in the group. Right now, that gap has hit about 52%, the widest it's been since late last year. In plain English, the MAG 7 isn't one team anymore. Some are winning big and some are losing big. And here's proof of how much that matters. There's an ETF that holds the MAG 7. And this year, it's actually down about 2% while the rest of the market, the S&P 500, is up. So, the famous just buy the MAG 7 trade has stopped working as one simple idea in the short run. And whenever the old group breaks apart like this, Wall Street goes looking for a fresh story to sell. The hottest story in the planet right now is pure artificial intelligence that that's exactly what Mangoes is built around. It shows how short-termminded the market is. Guys, I cannot repeat till I'm blue in the face. There will be a time at some point when people are saying AI is uninvestable. Just like we had that with electric vehicles, just like we had that with cannabis, just like we had that with the internet, just like we had it every single time there's something hyped up. But it doesn't mean it's uninvestable. You just have to pay the right price. And here's the part the hype videos will not tell you, and it's the most important thing in this whole video. Out of these six companies, you can only buy four of them right now. Meta, Nvidia, and Google have been public for years, and you can buy those today very easy. SpaceX just went public a few weeks ago in what was reportedly the biggest stock market debut in US history, raising around $75 billion at a value of about $1.8 8 trillion bucks. That's the four you can buy. But OpenAI, the chat GPT company, and Anthropic, the cloud company, have only just recently filed the paperwork to go public. It hasn't actually happened yet. Meaning, you cannot buy a single share in the public markets until they go public, which is expected to be sometime this fall. Guys, let that sink in. They are selling you a list called buy these six stocks before it's too late, and you literally cannot buy two of them. And this is the real lesson, the one that matters more than any catchy name. You can never invest based on a clever label. A cool nickname like Mangoes doesn't tell you whether a company is a great business and it does definitely doesn't tell you whether the price is fair. Those are the only two things that actually matter and they're the things we always have to figure out for ourselves. So let's take a quick look at the ones you can actually buy publicly. I want to show you guys the fundamentals behind the business, what we call our eight pillars, and then I'm going to use our stock analyzer tool to determine if today's price would make a promising entry point. Because guys, a great story becomes a bad investment if you pay the wrong price. Now guys, I want to remind everybody who watches our video, I say this in every video, do not take our titles or thumbnails literally. We are never here to give you a stock tip. We are here to teach you the process so that one day you can sleep better at night knowing how to value stock and make good assumptions about its future and understand the difference between price and value. So first let's take a look at Meta. So guys, last quarter Meta brought in over $56 billion in revenue. That's up 33% from one year ago and it earned a massive profit. The apps that you use every day are a cash machine. But there's a catch. Meta is spending enormous amounts of money on AI and data centers. So, the question is the one we always ask, especially recently of these tech companies. Is the price you pay worth the value you're getting? So, guys, let's take a look at Meta here. First off, the actual price of the company is 1.46 trillion. That stock price is merely a dividing net price market cap by all the shares outstanding. Now, enterprise value here is if you bought the company and paid off all of its debt. So right here, that $70 billion is essentially their debt, guys. They brought in $ 48 billion last year in free cash flow. That's after massive increase in artificial intelligence data center spending. The last 5-year average has been $41 billion. So they can easily afford their debt, it seems. Now, it's selling for 30 times free cash flow, only 20 times earnings. Why? Because their earnings are a lot higher than their free cash flow. For those of you who are new, that should be a red flag initially, but we already know that they're spending a lot of money on their capital expenditures for data centers. So, that's what explains this difference. Net income reflects the depreciation when you take that capital expenditure and split it out over many years. The free cash flow is the cash after immediately spending that money. Might sound a little complicated, but the bottom line is here. Usually, I'd be worried about this. I'm not as worried about why they're different right now. Okay, high returns on capital, 18.6% over the last 5-year average, 16% last year. What does this mean? It's a sign of quality. It says this is a quality business that gets good returns on the money when they invest in their company. Okay, look at this growth rate in terms of revenue. 22% a year for the last three years, 17.9 a year for the last five, 27% a year for the last 10. And one thing I'm actually surprised about, their profit margin is pretty much the same. I would have thought it would get bigger, but they're probably what that means is they're probably as they get better profit, they're probably expanding their fixed costs higher. They're probably hiring more people, doing things like that that take away from that growth, but that's okay because they have an 82% gross margin. It's amazing how much potential they have in international advertising revenue. It's absolutely incredible. So, let's go look at their eight pillars real quick. And by the way, our community members have Meta as a buy right now on average. So, guys, here's our eight pillars. Now remember, the eight pillars are not a reason to buy or sell a company, but they tell a story. What's the story telling us here about Meta? Well, look at their valuation. These are the two valuation metrics. Their 5-year PE and their 5year price of free cash flow. They're X's. Does that mean you shouldn't buy? Not necessarily. If I told you that Meta was going to double its profit every year for the next 20 years, this would be dirt effing cheap. I'd probably sell everything I own just to buy Meta stock. Other things, lower debt, buying back shares, and our and our community members have this as a buy. So, if they have it as a buy, that means the shares could be pretty cheap. I'm glad they're buying back cheap shares. Revenu's up, net income's up a lot, free cash flows up a lot, high returns on capital. So, a quality business that just might be a little overpriced based on these metrics. Now, guys, I threw a lot at you. If you're new to this, or even if you've been watching for a while and it still feels overwhelming, just be patient. You're not alone. It's been overwhelming for every single person that ever invested in their life, including Warren Buffett, Charlie Mer, all the greats. They didn't just wake up one day and go, I'm a genius in investing. It doesn't happen that way. What I'm here to do, and the reason I teach here is I want you to think differently. I want you to understand that when you buy a stock, you are buying a piece of a business. So, what am I going to do? I have an absolutely free key metrics PDF for you. It'll explain all these metrics for you. absolutely free. Click the link below in the it's either in the description or in the first pin comment and in a matter of minutes you'll get our PDF absolutely free. That way you and I can speak the exact same language and you're going to learn a few things and probably impress your friends as you talk very intelligently about companies going forward. So go ahead and do that. It's absolutely free. Now let's go check out the analyst estimates. So analysts are looking at a profit of $33 per share this year, growing to 58 in the next four or five years. Okay, so that's decent growth. One year of like below, actually two years below um double digits, but pretty solid. And then revenue growth, guys, look at this. 258 over double to 584 in the next seven years. That's over 10% revenue growth per year. That's incredible. So what do we have now? We have a story. We have some numbers. I always tell people in our community, if you have our software, before you do any deep research, go to the stock analyzer tool. And the reason being is make sure it's worth your time before you go any further in research. I always get frustrated when I hear people say, "No, you got to do all the research and then determine the price." No. First figure out if it's anywhere close to your price because if it's not, go find a different company. The stock's currently at 560. Let's say we run stock analyzer and it comes up to 200. Don't waste any more time. So guys, I usually run a 10-year analysis. And here are my stock analyzer assumptions. Revenue growth 7, 10, and 14% a year for the next 10 years. Profit margin 29, 31, and 33 and pretty close on free cash flow. Next, what would I apply? What PE and price of free cash flow would I apply 10 years from now to this company? Well, remember guys, the market average is 15 to 16, but you should apply a higher PE if it's a quality business. And I think this is a quality business. I think this company's going to be around for a long time, and I think they're just going to get better and better and better. So, I applied 20, 24, and 28. And then finally, what is my desired return? Well, guys, I put in 9%. That's not actually what I want to make. I'm trying to figure out intrinsic value. Everyone's desired return is going to be different. It all depends on how knowledgeable you are with the company, how much risk you think there's there. But for this video, I'm just trying to show what do I think the company is worth without any margin of safety. So I hit the analyze button. The stock's currently at 560. I have a low price of 580 to 600, high price of basically 1,500, middle price of basically 900 to 925. So based on my middle assumptions, if they all came out to be true, I'd be looking at 15% discounted cash flow return. Guys, next is Nvidia, the company that makes the chips behind almost all of AI. Their numbers are almost hard to believe. Last quarter revenue jumped 85% to over $80 billion and the data center part of the business grew 92%. Just to show you how impressive that $80 billion was last quarter, look at this guys, annually, they didn't even do $80 billion as recently as 2024 in the entire year. In the last quarter, they did over $80 billion. That is an astronomical sum of money. So, let's go break this down the same way we did with Meta. It is a $5.1 trillion business with a less than that enterprise value, which means they have less debt. They their cash on hand can more than pay off all of their debt. This is a cash net business essentially, guys. Super high returns on capital. 39 and a half% last year, 45% a year for the last five years. free cash flow was almost $120 billion in the last 12 months versus the 5-year average of 50. Now, this is very important to understand. This is a big difference. 50 to 120. We've got to remember that when looking at our eight pillars where we do a 5-year PE and 5year price of free cash flow. Their net income is 160 billion. I mean, they didn't even do 160 billion in revenue until when? Last year. Literally, it's insane, guys. Look at this profit margin. 10-year profit margin 52% 5 years 54% one year is 63% with a 74% gross margin. I mean this is crazy guys. This is absolutely insane. And they've only made $16 billion in total acquisitions the last 5 years. It's nothing. It's not like that even matters. So let's go to the eight pillars here. Just like Meta, we've got our X's here, but the numbers are a lot different. 105 times and 88 times their five-year numbers. low a little more apprehension here going forward. Um the the shares outstanding are lower. I mean maybe it's a cheap stock that they're justifying because remember buying back shares in and of itself is not a good idea. Now guys, I'm sure you've seen, especially if you're new, that this is a lot different way of thinking than other people do. Most people focus on the story and they say the story is awesome. To which I tell them, if the story is awesome and that's all that matters, then no price should be too high. pay whatever price is out there. They're like, "Well, that's not exactly true." But that's what you're saying. My goal here is combining the story and the numbers together to find the right price. And this is exactly why I teach on YouTube. So, let's go to analyst estimates. We have 478 per share in profit going to 1327 over the next six years. That's almost tripling. That's a lot. And revenue growth, 217 billion going to 684. That's over triple in the next five years according to analysts. So, let's go run our stock analyzer tool to determine the right price according to my assumptions. Now, guys, this one's hard because the growth rate has been so high. The question is, can it continue? And as an investor, a person who doesn't want to always bank on the best likely outcome, some of these assumptions that you're going to see, you might go, I disagree with that. That's the reason why having the tools are so important for you. So again, a 10-year analysis, revenue growth of 10, 15, and I went a lot higher at 25% a year for the next 10 years. Profit margin, guys, this one's hard. I did 30, 37, and 45 the last time I did this. I'm going to increase this. I'm going to go 35, 45, and 55%. I'm going to assume it continues on with these profit margins. Next, the PE 10 years from now, 20, 24, and 28. And again, my 9% no margin of safety intrinsic value return. So based on my assumptions above, I hit the analyze button. The stock's currently at 209. I have a low price of 114, a high price of 738, a middle price of 245. So guys, based on my middle assumptions above, I'm looking at 11% return based on today's price. The question you have to ask yourself is, and the question I ask myself is, how likely are those returns? Are those assumptions above? That's what makes investing hard. We don't know the future. And we're humans, we make mistakes. What I will say is most times when the world expects the best outcomes, it doesn't happen. So, I always exhibit caution in my investing for that reason. Does it mean I miss out on some stuff? Absolutely. But I sleep better at night because of it. Third company, guys, is the good old Googly Moogly. The owners of Google Search and this very channel you're watching. Last quarter's revenue grew 22% to almost $110 billion. Warren Buffett's Birkshshire Hathway has actually been loading up on some shares. So it is a 4.28 trillion company with a $4.38 trillion enterprise value. That difference is hundred billion. That's essentially their net debt. And they generated $64 billion in free cash flow. Now guys, here's what I want to show you. Their net income was 160 billion. How insane is that? And that difference is all their capital expenditures. That hundred billion dollar difference is the money they put into data centers and AI. That's a lot of freaking money, guys. Google just entered a deal with SpaceX to lease their data center space for $920 million per month. That's almost a billion dollars per month for the next three years. It is a $30 billion deal. That's how much data space they need. Guys, returns on capital 18.74 for the last five years, 13.6. Look at the growth in their profit margin. 26.9% a year for the last 10, 29.4% for the last five, 38% last year alone. Incredible. It's selling for 66 times free cash flow, which is a lot, but only 27 times earnings because of that difference between capital expenditures and their net income. Absolutely insane. 14 billion dollars in acquisitions over the last five years is a drop in the bucket for them. Our analy our analysts, our users actually have this company as a hold right now, but that's based on six months of voting. So that might have changed as of late. So guys, our eight pillars exactly like the first two. We have check marks all around except for the five-year earnings and price to earnings and 5year price to free cash flow. Other than that, they're buying back shares, high returns on capital, cash flow growth. Even with all that capital expenditure, still a lot of cash flow growth, great quality business. So, let's go to the analyst estimates. We have 1454 this year in profit per share, over doubled to $31 in the next 5 years. And then on the revenue front, we've got 500 billion, doubling to over a trillion over the next seven years. So, over 10% revenue growth a year for the next seven years. So, guys, now we're here. What are our assumptions we're going to make for 10 years? Revenue growth 7 913. Profit margin and free cash flow 28 30 and 32. Guys, they did 38 last year. This could be very low. It could be very, very low. YouTube is growing like crazy for them. They're making a ton of money off of ads. This is where I look at it going, man, am I being too conservative here? That's the question you have to ask yourself. Next PE 10 years from now, I did 20, 23, and 26. Guys, you know, I'm going to I'm not going to lie to you. I think this deserves a really high PE. And guys, of course, my 9% no margin of safety desired return. Now, there's something I have to tell you before we finish the stock analyzer. Guys, most people don't fail at investing because they lack information. They fail because when the market feels unpredictable and every decision feels like it could be the wrong one, they freeze. That anxiety is costing you far more than bad trades ever could. And misunderstanding is what creates fear. And then fear creates costly mistakes. Imagine knowing the right price to pay for a stock based on your own assumptions about the future, not someone else's guesses. Imagine having eight clear pillars that tell you the story of a business, so you always know what the right question next to ask is. And imagine a screener that quietly watches the market for you so you can sit back and wait with confidence until the right price arrives. That is exactly what we've built at Everything Money. Just like I was demonstrating for you in this video, our community is a place where clarity replaces confusion, where your next step feels far more obvious instead of far more overwhelming, and where you're never making decisions in isolation. Guys, the second guessing you have is going to greatly decrease. You're going to start trusting your instincts because they'll finally be backed by the right tools and the right people inside of our community. This isn't just about growing your money. It's about becoming someone who's in control of their financial future. So, the question I have for you is a very simple question. What is that worth to you? What's that feeling deep down inside worth to you? If it's worth a dollar a day, which I'm quite sure it is, then I have great news for you. We have a 7-day trial for just $7. Click the link in the description. Get full access today. Run whatever stock you've been thinking about buying. Even run the stocks we just did in your own versions and see what the numbers actually tell you before you spend one minute and $1 extra on it. So I hit the analyze button and Google stock is currently at 342 and I have a low price of 240, high price of 530 and a middle price of 330. So based on today's stock price and my assumptions above, it's still not at a level that I would feel comfortable entering a position. But that's me. You might look at the numbers and say, "Paul, I see something completely different." SpaceX completely different animal. It just went public in that record-breaking IPO. It was valued around $1.8 trillion. It is highly speculative, and you need to understand that investing is about understanding the business and its cash flows and what it's going to produce in the future. IPOs also typically follow a pattern where they skyrocket and then come tumbling down over time. I hope there's a point in the future that SpaceX meets my process. Now, before we wrap up, here's something fun. A while back, I put together my own list of stocks that I believe can beat these famous groups, specifically the Mag 7, over the long run. And I'm about to give you a fresh update on exactly how that list is doing. That update is coming out in early July, so keep an eye out for it. Now guys most people look at investing and they think they're investing and they worry about day-to-day price movements. I do not. I care about 10, 20 years from now. Do I think this company will be around for the next 10, 20, 30 years? Do I think the revenue and profit will be up in that time? And if so, if the answer to those first two is yes, can I pay a reasonable price today? That is what matters to me. So, do I think that my list of stocks would beat these lists over the next 10, 20 years? I do believe that. And if you want to see how the Real Magnificent 7 is actually doing against the list that I picked, go watch this video on your screen right now because the short-term results may surprise you. Thank you for your time.