Top 3 Stocks to Buy HEAVY Before End of April 2026

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YouTube URL

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcUc1q4l7DQ

Status

Analyzed

Requested On

April 19, 2026 at 05:40 PM

Overall Performance

+2.76%

Recommendations

AMZN BUY
"i might be willing to buy it at 200."
Context: “…or just go outright re-evaluate and see if the stock is worth more and i might be willing to buy it at 200.”
Price on publish date: $249.70
Last day closing price: $245.34 (Jul 11, 2026)
Profit/Loss: $-4.36 (-1.75%)
ABNB BUY
"i do have cash secured puts on Airbnb to buy it at lower prices."
Context: “Guys, in full disclosure, i do have cash secured puts on Airbnb to buy it at lower prices.”
Price on publish date: $137.81
Last day closing price: $146.89 (Jul 10, 2026)
Profit/Loss: +$9.08 (+6.59%)

Full Transcript

Okay, guys. We have three stocks to cover today. And it may surprise you that what we're about to do in the next 20 minutes will probably save you hours of work because we are analyzing these in a way that no one else on YouTube talks about. A financial analyst named Matthew Frankle put out his top 10 long-term picks for April 2026. Our team pulled three of them, and we're running every one of those through our process to see if the price actually makes sense. Okay, first up, Amazon. I don't know if you guys have heard of this company, but it's been around for a while. It's quite awesome. I think it was incorporated on my birthday, actually. But anyways, everyone knows Amazon as the place you go to to order something and have it show up at your door in the next hour, 2 hours, day, or what now would be considered very slow, which is 2 days. But the business is actually much bigger than that. Amazon has three main ways it makes money. First off, online shipping. They run the biggest online store in the world and millions of people shop there every single day, probably every single hour. Second form of revenue, cloud computing. Amazon has a service called AWS, which is Amazon Web Services. In simple terms, companies rent computing power from Amazon. Guys, think of it like renting a storage unit instead of building your own. AWS is used by Netflix, McDonald's, and thousands of other businesses. It is growing fast because of AI. Every company building AI needs a lot of computing power and Amazon is one of the main places providing it. Third, advertising. Now guys, you might not think about this, but when you search for a product on Amazon, you're going to see sponsored results at the top. Companies pay for those spots and that business is now producing billions of dollars a year and growing significantly. Guys, I don't know how often you use Amazon, but literally it is every single day for my wife and I. We don't go to the store unless we absolutely have to because it's such an easy way to get products to you. In fact, um Sebastian Mascalo, he's a great comedian. He had a great bit a few years ago on Instagram where he would go on and say, "Let's see what my wife ordered from Amazon today." He'd literally take the Amazon packages, open them up, show you guys what they were because that's how useful it is. Now, Amazon is down from its highs right now because investors are nervous about how much money they are spending to build out AI. But the article points out that Amazon still leads in both e-commerce and cloud computing, two of the biggest industries in the world. The question is whether the current price versus value has ample margin of safety. So, let's find out. Now, guys, you're watching this video. I don't know what title you came in on. I don't even know the title of this video. And guess what? By the time you clicked on it, it's probably been changed three or four times. Do not take our titles literally. We're here to bring you in on an idea and then teach you the real story behind it. It is a two. This is the real price of Amazon. It's not the ticker price, the market cap. It's all the shares multiplied by shares outstanding. All right. Now, the great news is generates a lot of income. The bad news for investors that's scaring them is it hurts their free cash flow. So, they had 77.7 billion in net income versus 7.7 billion in free cash flow. Now, if you're new, you're probably like, "What's the difference?" as well. Guys, this is actually the cash in and cash out after their capital expenditures. This is net income. Net income is the IRS and SEC's way of calculating profit, but it's not the true cash in and cash out. That's a very common mistake that a lot of people um get. They think that net income and free cash were the same. In the short run, they can be wildly different. In the long run, they should equal out. Your job as an investor is to say, why is this so much lower than this? Well, guys, they're building a lot of infrastructure in to keep expanding. So, from a price to free cash flow perspective, it's very high because their free cash flow is low. I'm not going to worry about that so much because Amazon to me has earned the right to be trusted on their numbers to a certain extent. Doesn't mean they're not going to manipulate things here and there, but I see this difference and I see why that is. All right. So, profit margin keeps growing. I like that. They were 6% a year for the last 10 years, 10.8% last year. gross profit of 50%. That gross profit keeps getting higher and higher. That's every extra dollar they sell. That keeps going up and up. And AWS is like something absurd, like 90% gross profit. Every extra contract they get is like 90% to the bottom line before taxes and overhead. Look at this growth rate. 21% a year for the last 10, 13% a year for the last five, 11% a year for the last three. Now, I always heard people years ago saying Amazon's going to grow like 20% for the rest of time. No, they're not. It's impossible, guys. Just do the math. If a company, just like somebody said about Bitcoin, it's going to grow 19% a year for the rest of time. Well, then it'll be bigger than the entire world economy after how long? It's just not possible. As something gets bigger and bigger and bigger, it's hard to grow at high rates of return, at high rates of growth. It's just impossible. Now, return on capital is getting better. 7.7% a year in the last five years, 9% last year. This is kind of like the quality of the business. The higher and higher that number is, the better the quality of business it is, and you should be paying a premium for that. Our our community um rating is a hold at $188 intrinsic value. Let's go to the eight pillars, guys. Pretty effing ugly, but I'm ignoring the price of free cash flow. Cash flow is down. I'm ignoring that one. Shares outstanding, you know, it's up a little bit. Not a ton. 5.23%. Got it. um a lot of debt, but that debt is based on their five-year free cash flow, which is down significantly. So, this is my point here. The eight pillars tell a story, and the story to me on Amazon is they're investing a lot in the future. The question is, will it pay off? That way, they can make a lot more money on the money they're putting in. That is the real question we have to ask here about any company. All right, so let's go see what analysts think. Well, guys, anal analysts think that Amazon's going to crush it. $8 per share this year growing to 1732 pretty over double in the next four years. That's a lot of growth. And revenue growth, a company this large, 12.6, 11.6, 12.3, 9.4, and 10%. That's a lot of growth for a company this large, guys. This will be a trillion dollar revenue business in 2028, according to analysts. Now, guys, I threw a lot at you. If you're new to the channel or even if you're just confused in general and you feel overwhelmed, it's okay. Everyone in the history of the world when getting started in anything feels overwhelmed. You got to get right through it. How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time. We're here to break this down as simple as possible for you. So, I made a cheat sheet for you. It gives you all of our key metrics, the key metrics that you find on this page, all broken down, explained, showing the calculation, ready for you to download to make you a better investor and help make this all understandable. Imagine if you could understand every single one of these ratios. How much more confident will you be in making decisions and investing? That's the question to ask yourself. So, we have the story, we have a story, we have numbers. What I always recommend everybody do is go right to the stock analyzer tool very quickly. And the reason being is guys, I believe in saving time. I believe in understanding what you're buying. Make some reasonable assumptions. And if you're within a good range or all the numbers are green, go do more research. If all the numbers are red and it's too far away, find another company. Set this set Amazon to your watch list at a certain price. Do the research when it actually matters, when it's close to your price. As an example, if the company is worth $20 a share to you and it's selling for 2,000, why spend any more time? Don't be like the the meet Kevins out there who fall in love the story and then force themselves to buy something at the wrong price. So, here are my assumptions on Amazon for the next 10 years. Guys, I'm a little conservative here. I did 4,8 and 12% revenue growth. I got more aggressive though when it came to profit. Look at this profit and free cash flow. Now, first off, I made the free cash flow the same because it'll equate out over time. I did profit of 8, 12, and 16%. Keep in mind, guys, my middle 12% they've never hit before. I am giving them a lot of generosity here. So, I'm being more conservative in revenue growth, but I'm being much more aggressive on the profit. Now, what PE and price of free cash flow would I assign to this company 10 years from now? Not today, not five years from now. At the end of my analysis, guys, Amazon is a premium business. It is everywhere. If I gave you $2 trillion today to compete with Amazon, I still think you'd have a hard time doing it. That's how ingrained in our lives they are. So, I put in 22, 25, and 28. And finally, my no margin of safety, market intrinsic value return of 9%. This this is not the price I'm paying for it. It's the price of what do I think this company is worth. So, I hit the analyze button. Boom. Guys, this is interesting. I have a low price of 110, high price of 497. According to my assumptions above, this company is worth about 250 to me. Now, at 237, for me personally, that's not enough margin of safety. It might be for you, but for me, I'm still going to wait. I have it on my watch list at 180. I'm actually going to increase that to 200. That way, the software notifies me and I can then go from there to go either sell cash secured puts, which allows me to buy the stock at a lower price while being paid, or just go outright re-evaluate and see if the stock is worth more and I might be willing to buy it at 200. But for right now, for me, I'm being patient. But remember, personal finance is more personal than finance. You have to decide what the right price for you is. Guys, stock number two is Airbnb. Guys, I personally have five homes on Airbnb that I rent out around the country. If you've ever booked a vacation and stayed in someone else's home, apartment, cabin, something like that, you probably use Airbnb. Now, here's how it works. Airbnb does not own any of its properties. Instead, it connects two groups of people. On one side, hosts, people like me, who have a space they want to rent out. On the other side, there are travelers looking for a place to stay. Airbnb sits in the middle. They take a small fee from each booking and they keep the platform running. What I love about them also is they take care of all my taxes for me. So, when I'm sitting there paying state and city taxes on these rentals, I don't handle it. Airbnb takes it for me. They pay me my cut. They take their fee. They pay the cities out. I don't have to worry about any of that other BS. Right now, there are over 5 million hosts and more than 8 million properties listed. Guys, I've been a user of Airbnb for a long time, and now I'm using it for for renting my properties out. I love the service. Now, a lot like Uber, there are a lot of regulatory issues going through. Like, for example, in New York City, a very heavy hotel destination, the hotel lobby 1, and now you can only rent your house out on Airbnb if you're physically there during the stay. So, essentially renting a room out. How's that going to work out for you? Now, guys, in the final three months of 2025, people booked nearly 122 million nights through Airbnb. Now, what really stands out is how profitable this business has become for Airbnb. They made over 4.6 billion in free cash flow in 2025. They also have a massive cash pile. The article notes that management has been buying back a lot of their own stock. So, guys, I have had discussions about Airbnb in our group. It is not part of my 33 stocks I want to own forever. But I feel like me knowing it very well and how I use it both for making money and also for renting, maybe it will be because this company, guys, they're an incredible business and I don't think they're going to be shut out of every market out there. At the end of the day, the government wants their tax revenue and they're getting it here. They're happy. This is an $80 billion market cap business with an $82 billion enterprise value. This $3 billion difference is essentially their debt, guys. They did 4.65 billion last year. They did 3.76 billion in free cash flow for the last five years. So, literally, they can pay off that debt with one year of cash flow. They've got gross margin of 83%. Now, do I have gripes about Airbnb? Yes. We had a renter recently. So, I had a new guy start with me managing my properties on January 15th. on the five properties we have from January 15th till now, I think we had 47 different bookings. We had all five stars for one one star. That one one star was a retaliatory review. The second that person got to the property, we knew this person was trouble. They showed up before the previous renter had even checked out. They were lying about things. They were trying to get they were trying to get us to pay off plat to get them to pay off platform, which is against Airbnb rules. I immediately told my guy, "Reach out to Airbnb. Let them know." We have a written email from Airbnb saying it was clear that this person was being difficult and if they wrote a negative review, they would remove it. Fast forward, they wrote a one-star review. We gave a very thorough response for Airbnb. Guys, here it is. Remove it. No, we can't remove it. That's a problem I have with Airbnb. It was clearly a retaliatory review. Clearly, they broke rules. And yet, Airbnb is so protenant because they worry about the tenant being upset that they would not remove the review. But at the end of the day, whenever I'm in this Facebook group on Airbnb, the people always say, "But we get a lot of rent from them." So, I understand that. Other things I like, look at this return on capital, guys. 5-year return on capital, 30%. One year, 44%. Absolutely incredible. Let's go check out the eight pillars here. Oh, wow. I'm actually surprised by this. Yeah, this is basically an eight pillar to me because I care more about free cash flow than net income, and the free cash flow is way higher than net income. So, to me, I'm just like, "Yeah, this is great. Look at this debt level. 0.1. This is probably the lowest I've seen 0.1. Now, let's see what analysts have to say about this. 492 in profit this year growing to 930 over the next four years. And then revenue 13.65 growing to 19.39. Not as much revenue growth, but when you have a lot of gross margin, that 80 plus% gross margin, it can drive a lot of profit down to the bottom line without having to grow a ton. And that's one big benefit. All right, guys. So now let's go to the stock analyzer tool. Let me pull up Airbnb. Here's what I did for revenue growth for the next 10 years. 5 8 11%. Profit margin and free cash flow. I made them the same even though free cash flow is higher. I did 30 35 and 40. Now PE guys, I actually think this might be low. 1619 and 22. Here's why I think it might be low. They own the market right now. Could that be overcome by somebody else? Sure. Um, and also the high returns on capital that deserves a premium. I wouldn't blame somebody that did 20 23 and 26 because I really do believe Airbnb like if you told me right now 5 or 10 years from now Airbnb didn't exist, I'd be like whoa, what happened? It'd have to be some major regulation stuff. So my 9% return, hit the analyze button, the stock's currently at 130. Investing without the right tools is like running through your house at night with no lights on. You might be okay, but you're probably going to run into something and hurt yourself. Everything Money built this software that turns the lights on for you. The stock analyzer shows you what a stock is actually worth based on the assumptions that you get to make. The eight pillars help check whether the business is strong enough to even own. You stop stumbling around so much in the dark and you start making decisions that you can actually see clearly. We had a member cancels account, thought he would go it alone. He came back a little while later and said this. I tried to go around without a stock analyzer and it's like running in the house at night with no lights on. That's what it feels like when you've had a real process and don't have it anymore. You feel the difference immediately. Guys, the great part is you can try it for 7 days and see what investing with the lights actually on feels like. So, start your 7-day trial for just $7. Click the link in the description and get full access right now. Ready for this, guys? I have a low price of 110, high price of 290, middle price of 181. Guys, in full disclosure, I do have cash secured puts on Airbnb to buy it at lower prices. The question I have to ask myself is, is this a business I want to own forever? Stock number three, Google, Alphabet, which most people know as Google. Let me break it down very simply. First, Google search. When you want to find something online, you type it into Google. It is literally a verb. Almost 90% of the people in the world do this. Businesses pay Google to show their ads when you search. That is where most of Alphabet's revenue comes from. Second, ready for this one? YouTube. Google owns YouTube, the biggest video platform in the world. Over two billion people use it every single month and advertisers pay to run ads on those videos. Third, Google Cloud. Just like Amazon has AWS, Google rents computing power power to other companies. It is the third biggest player in cloud computing and they're growing very fast. Fourth, Whimo. This is Google's self-driving car business. It's already operating robo taxi service in several US cities and it's considered the leader in the space. Most people forget that Alphabet owns this, but it could be enormous one day. Guys, I have a house in, as I told you guys for Airbnb, I have a house in Arizona. when I went down there. Now, the place my house is in, the suburb my house is in, who doesn't come there. But when we go downtown and we have to park somewhere, we'll take a Whimo. If I have to go to the airport, we'll take a Whimo from certain locations to drop the cars off. Now, I will say this, I didn't like the cleanliness in the Whimo. It smelled like weed. So, there are kinks in there, but at the end of the day, it is such an easy service and it's so safe and I don't have to worry about talking to anybody. So guys, Google is down from its highs because of worries about AI competition and the broader tech selloff, but the article points out that Google Search is still dominant. YouTube is still growing and Google Cloud is becoming more important every single quarter. So let's run the numbers. Let's take a look at this company right now. $3.87 trillion market cap. 3.87 trillion, guys. 73 billion in free cash flow versus net income of 132 and the 5-year average of 68 billion in free cash flow versus net income of 88. Again, the big difference is investing in that cloud. Okay, cloud computing high margin business. Gross profit is 60%. Bottom line profit has grown from 25% a year for the last 10 years up to 32% last year. So guys, remember this. If the five-year profit margin was 27.6 six and the in the 10 years is 25.39. It means that the pre the second the 10 years past the five years of the 10 years past was like 23%. So it keeps getting better and better. Their their profit overall is up almost 40% overall. That's a huge number and growing. Growth rate look at this 18% a year for the last 10 17% for the last five 12% for the last three. And guys, look at this. A very new metric. We have the price, the PE to growth ratio. This is requested by our community members here in our software. What this does, it takes the PE and divides it by the last 5 years growth rate of earnings per share. If it's below one, that's incredible. It means the growth rate is faster, higher than the PE ratio. Because remember guys, if a company's a 30PE and their exact copy is a 10p, which one's a better buy? Well, we don't know. Because if the company with a 30p can grow at 50% a year and the company with the 10p is declining, which one's better? Clearly the one growing 50% a year. That's what the PEG ratio helps you out with. Now, our community members have it as a hold with intrinsic value of 236. Let's go to the eight pillars. And that's what I thought it was going to be. Six checks, two X's. The two X's are our valuation metrics. But remember, a lot of growth there. So that could make it still cheap. Let's go to the analyst estimates, guys. They're basically doubling their profit in the next four years according to analysts. 1155 to 2215 per share and revenue growth 17.5 14 8 and a half and 12% revenue growth almost 730 billion guys keep in mind 1 trillion at Amazon versus 700 billion in revenue at Google. I'd rather have this. The margins are so much better. I mean it's absolutely incredible. Absolutely freaking incredible. So, we go to stock analyzer. We pull up our good old googly moogly up here. So, guys, we have a 10-year analysis. I did five, nine, and 13% revenue growth. I did free cash flow and profit margin of 25, 30, and 35. I could be low on this. I could understand doing much higher than that. PE, I put 20, 23, and 26. I could understand going higher than that, interestingly enough. And finally, a 9% desired return. Guys, I want to keep in mind before I hit this the analyze button. This is all fun and dandy. If we have a recession or a down market, you're going to see people talking about 15 pees and 12 pees on Google. That's how you're going to know we're at a point where things are just cheap. Hit the analyze button. Boom. I have a low price of 175, high price of 554. Guys, it's almost green here. It was green yesterday. $316 in the middle. So, according to my assumptions, it is selling for what it's worth right now. Guys, I have something you need to watch right now. I picked seven stocks that I personally believe will beat the market's magnificent seven over the next decade. We've been going head-to-head for a full year, and we just dropped a brand new update on how they're doing, and trust me, the results will surprise you. So, click the video on your screen right now. Thank you for your time.