Should You Forget Amazon? Why These Unstoppable Stocks Are Better Buys.

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I don’t really think any investor should forget about Amazon, as if anyone could. Amazon has incredible future potential in e-commerce, artificial intelligence (AI), and more. Amazon stock is up 31% this year, and it’s the leading player in two of the world’s most important industries right now. Sixty-three out of 67 covering analysts call Amazon stock a buy, with the other four calling it a hold.

However, the staggering gains investors have benefited from in the past aren’t likely to be reproduced; Amazon is already a huge company, and as much potential as it has, it’s building on a huge foundation. Doubling or tripling its business at current levels is going to take longer than it did when Amazon was getting started.

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Investors looking for supercharged growth are more likely to find it in younger stocks with massive growth opportunities. If you’re looking for a candidate for your portfolio, I have some ideas for you. Consider e.l.f. Beauty (NYSE: ELF) and Revolve Group (NYSE: RVLV), two young companies that are leveraging digital platforms to compete with industry leaders.

The beauty industry has been dominated by a few giants for decades already, but the digital era is bringing down the hierarchy. Industry leader Estée Lauder has acquired luxury brands for years, concentrating its dominance, while L’Oréal, Revlon, and a few others have been the top names in mass beauty, also buying up the competition to consolidate. They have made for formidable competition and strong barriers to entry.

e.l.f. has carved out a niche by focusing on digital and social media and creating an omnichannel strategy that speaks to its young target market. It’s still a small outfit compared to its larger peers, with a fraction of their sales, but it’s growing much faster than almost any other cosmetics brand today. It has captured market share and moved up from the No. 5 spot to the No. 2 spot in mass cosmetic brand dollar share from 2022 to the most recent quarter, and its skincare business has increased 45% at the same time that the overall industry is up 1.2%.

In an economic climate that’s still under pressure, e.l.f. is demonstrating incredible resilience. Sales increased 50% year over year in the 2025 fiscal first quarter (ended June 30), and gross margin expanded by 0.8 percentage points to 71%. Operating income decreased, as did earnings per share (EPS), but both were positive and healthy, and management raised its outlook for full-year revenue, operating income, and EPS.

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