2 Nasdaq Stocks to Buy Before They Soar as Much as 115% in 2025, According to Certain Wall Street Analysts

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The Nasdaq Composite is a tech-centric index that tracks the performance of more than 3,000 stocks listed on the exchange. Just this week, the Nasdaq, the S&P 500, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average all climbed to record heights, the latest in a long line of all-time highs hit this year. The ongoing rally has a great many stocks at or near new record highs, leaving some investors to wonder whether there’s still upside ahead.

Those concerns are unfounded, according to Wall Street, which remains remarkably bullish. As we close out the year, forecasts for 2025 continue to ratchet higher. While these targets are focused on the broader S&P 500, they can be instructive.

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Analysts at Goldman Sachs predict the S&P 500 will hit 6,500 in December 2025, representing gains of roughly 7% compared to Thursday’s closing price. Not to be outdone, Bank of America issued a year-end price target of 6,666 for 2025, or upside of 10% from its current level. Just this week, Wells Fargo issued the most bullish forecast yet, calling for the benchmark index to hit 7,007 next year, representing potential gains of about 15%.

Despite the recent run-up, opportunities abound. Let’s take a look at two Nasdaq stocks with additional upside of up to 115%, according to certain Wall Street analysts.

Image source: Getty Images.

The first Nasdaq stock with significant potential upside is Sirius XM Holdings (NASDAQ: SIRI). The company dominates satellite radio services in North America, with 34 million paying subscribers. Its customer base jumps to 150 million when you include its ad-supported Pandora music streaming service, so its audience is unmatched.

However, the recent economic downturn and a complicated merger took a toll. Decades-high inflation forced cash-strapped consumers to make difficult choices with their limited disposable income. Some, understandably, chose to let their SiriusXM subscription lapse.

There was also a fundamental misunderstanding of its recent merger, the reverse stock split, and the resulting complicated accounting transactions, which weighed on its results. These combined to drag the stock down 51% so far this year — but things aren’t as bad as they might seem at first glance.

In the third quarter, Sirius’ revenue slipped 4% year over year to $2.17 billion while reporting a loss per share of $8.74, compared to diluted EPS of $0.82 in the prior year quarter — but that needs context. The company took a one-time, non-cash impairment charge of $3.36 billion to goodwill related to its acquisition of Liberty Sirius XM tracking stock. Had it not been for that one-time charge, Sirius would have delivered EPS of roughly $1.17, an increase of 43%.

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