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How to find compelling stocks primed to outperform during a sensitive second half of the year? Here are a few of the names the best-performing Wall Street analysts are betting on right now.
As fears of a restoration in the coronavirus sweep the globe, it could make sense to follow the stock picks of analysts with a proven hunt down record of success. Here we used TipRanks analyst forecasting service to pinpoint Wall Street’s best-performing analysts. These are the analysts with the highest big name rate and average return measured on a one-year basis- and factoring in the number of ratings made by each analyst.
With that in determine, here are the best-performing analysts’ five favorite stocks:
GWPH
Medical cannabis stock GW Pharma has just learned the thumbs up from five-star JP Morgan analyst Cory Kasimov. He reiterated his GWPH buy rating with a $187 payment target on June 23. Despite a 20% year-to-date rally, Kasimov’s price target nonetheless translates into sizable upside implied of 50%.
After hosting GWPH during the firm’s 2020 Biotech Conference Call Series, Kasimov praised the farm animals’s favorable set up, writing: “Our conversation with management highlighted numerous upside levers in the near-term and the mid- to long-term.”
For as it happens, GWPH’s flagship product, cannabinoid Epidiolex has just enjoyed a very successful launch. However, it is still single less than 50% penetrated in Dravet and Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome, leaving ample opportunity for growth. That’s as GWPH is effect up for a potentially very profitable Epidiolex label expansion in Tuberous Sclerosis (TSC) with a US regulatory decision set for July 31.
“Near-term marker expansion opportunities and the potential for off-label use in the broader population of general epilepsy patients could contribute significantly to the top merchandise” Kasimov writes.
He also recommends keeping a close eye on the company’s second drug, Sativex, a ‘perhaps underappreciated capacity revenue driver’ for multiple sclerosis-related stiffness. In terms of analyst performance, Kasimov is ranked #123 out of over 6,700 analysts covered by TipRanks.
NVDA
‘Effort towards a recurring revenue stream’ exclaimed Credit Suisse’s John Pitzer following Nvidia’s new partnership contract with Mercedes-Benz. The two companies intend to launch a fleet of autonomous vehicles (AV) by 2024 using a vertically integrated blend with NVDA silicon/ hardware, and importantly software, based on Nvidia’s AV software stack Drive.
According to Pitzer, the compact provides a “traditional” revenue stream of silicon/ hardware, and a “non-traditional” software-based recurring revenue stream (split 50/50 with Mercedes) which “over the viability of the vehicle could generate MORE Rev than the initial Silicon/Hardware sale.”
Moreover, NVDA has continued to up their platform strategy for other verticals including medical genomics, robotics, telecom and conversational AI- implying the hidden for even more recurring revenue streams over time. With this in mind, the analyst reiterated his Nvidia buy berating on June 23 with a $425 stock price forecast (12% upside potential).
Net-net, “We continue to see NVDA as the in the most suitable way secular growth stock in Semis with an almost open-ended TAM [total addressable market] protected by first movers’ improvement and wide/deep moats in both silicon AND software” the analyst stated.
Pitzer is ranked #44 by TipRanks out of at an end 6,700 analysts, with an impressive 21% average return per rating.
DOCU
On June 24 Oppenheimer’s Koji Ikeda initiated coverage on e-signature array DocuSign with a buy rating and $200 stock price forecast. Even though shares have exploded by at an end 125% year-to-date, this Top 100 analyst still believes 19% further upside potential lies at the.
As a result, he sees DOCU as a ‘core investment holding’ with a compelling value proposition. Organizations that take up DocuSign will never revert to old workflows, says Ikeda, creating a longtail opportunity for future installed-base monetization through spread and up-selling.
What’s more getting back-to-work will require efficient and accurate office re-entry documentation modifies, which is exactly what DocuSign does. “We anticipate this could drive adoption, usage, and upside to determines, which could be overlooked by the Street” the analyst writes.
With such a significant rally since March, Ikeda confesses that investors could face near-term choppiness, but ultimately “DocuSign is a proven success story, run by a visionary guidance team, and is successfully taking share in the large, but underpenetrated ~$50B digital agreement management opportunity.”
Ikeda brags a stellar 91% success rate according to TipRanks, with 84 out of 91 ratings profitable over a one-year stretch.
MA
RBC Capital’s Daniel Perlin has just reiterated his buy call on payments giant Mastercard with a bullish $370 creator price forecast. With shares flat year-to-date, his Street-high price target suggests 24% upside future is on the cards for investors.
“Mastercard remains one of our best ideas in the space given our belief that investors should look to core on long-term, secular-driven stories that provide solid organic growth with opportunities for margin expansion” the analyst explained on June 24.
He notes that MA has now rescued three additional weeks of Q2/20 operating metrics, through the week of June 21. Overall recent looks are encouraging, says Perlin, with steady improvements continuing through the first three weeks of June. Upon my word, switched volumes were down (1%) y/y, versus the May 28 update where volumes were down (8%) y/y.
And although cross-border corpses depressed, he believes this latest update can enable investors to update their base-case scenarios and gain aplomb for putting a floor around cross-border revenues.
Perlin is ranked #129 by TipRanks out of over 6,700 analysts, carting an 17% average return per rating and 71% success rate on a one-year basis.