The Top 10

1. NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA)

With a Q·Score of 9.1 — the highest on this week's list — NVIDIA's data reflects a company firing on nearly every measurable cylinder. Revenue grew 73.2% year-over-year, earnings grew 95.6%, and the profit margin sits at 55.6%, meaning the company keeps more than half of every dollar it brings in. Perhaps most striking: NVIDIA has beaten earnings-per-share (EPS) estimates in 100% of the quarters tracked, and 95 out of 57 covering analysts rate it a buy, with a consensus price target implying 35.6% upside from the current price of $198.45.

2. Meta Platforms, Inc. (META)

Meta's Q·Score of 8.9 is underpinned by a combination of strong earnings growth (62.4%) and a forward P/E — the price relative to expected future earnings — of just 16.8, which is notably modest for a company growing at this pace. Revenue is up 33.1% and the profit margin stands at 32.8%. With 89% of 59 analysts rating it a buy and a consensus target suggesting 36.8% upside from $608.75, the data paints a picture of a large-cap platform business that the analyst community views as undervalued relative to its growth trajectory.

3. Microsoft Corporation (MSFT)

Microsoft scores 8.7, reflecting steadier but highly consistent growth: revenue up 18.3%, earnings up 23.4%, and a 100% EPS beat rate across tracked quarters. The profit margin of 39.3% and a return on equity (ROE — how efficiently a company generates profit from shareholders' money) of 34% highlight the durability of its business model. Ninety-four percent of 52 analysts rate it a buy, and the consensus target implies 35.4% upside from $414.20.

4. Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL)

Alphabet ties Microsoft at a Q·Score of 8.7, but the story here is earnings growth: up 82% year-over-year, well ahead of its 21.8% revenue growth, signalling significant margin expansion. The profit margin of 37.9% and ROE of 38.9% are among the stronger readings in this week's list. The forward P/E of 27.1 is higher than Meta's, which may explain why the consensus price target implies a more modest 7.3% upside from $385.69 — though 92% of 53 analysts still rate it a buy.

5. Micron Technology, Inc. (MU)

Micron's numbers are the most dramatic in this week's list: revenue growth of 196.3% and earnings growth of 756% year-over-year, reflecting a sharp cyclical recovery in the memory chip market. The forward P/E of just 5.3 — meaning the stock trades at roughly five times expected earnings — is the lowest valuation multiple in the top 10 by a wide margin. The consensus upside of only 1.7% from $542.21 suggests analysts see the price as close to fair value at current levels, even as 89% of 42 analysts maintain buy ratings.

6. Broadcom Inc. (AVGO)

Broadcom earns a Q·Score of 8.4 with a balanced profile: revenue up 29.5%, earnings up 31.6%, a profit margin of 36.6%, and a 100% EPS beat rate. The forward P/E of 23.3 sits in the middle of the pack for this list. With 93% of 42 analysts rating it a buy and a consensus target implying 12.9% upside from $421.28, the data reflects a semiconductor and infrastructure software business with consistent execution.

7. Palantir Technologies Inc. (PLTR)

Palantir's Q·Score of 8.3 comes with an important asterisk visible in the data: a forward P/E of 77.2, the highest valuation multiple in this week's top 10 by a significant margin. Revenue grew 70% and earnings grew 647.6%, but the buy ratio of 58% — compared to 89–95% for most peers here — indicates that analyst opinion is notably more divided. The data shows a company with explosive growth metrics priced at a substantial premium, which the analyst community appears to weigh differently than the pure momentum numbers suggest.

8. Netflix, Inc. (NFLX)

Netflix scores 8.2, supported by earnings growth of 86.4% on revenue growth of 16.2% — a gap that points to meaningful operating leverage (the ability to grow profits faster than revenues as fixed costs are spread over a larger base). The ROE of 48.5% is the third-highest in this week's list. The EPS beat rate of 50% is the lowest here, and the buy ratio of 74% is below the group average, suggesting a more mixed analyst view despite the strong profitability trend. The current price of $92.06 reflects a forward P/E of 24.0.

9. Eli Lilly and Company (LLY)

Eli Lilly is the sole healthcare name in this week's top 10, scoring 8.2 on the back of 55.5% revenue growth and 169.9% earnings growth — figures more commonly associated with technology companies. The ROE of 107.5% is the second-highest on the list, behind only NVIDIA, reflecting the exceptional capital efficiency of its drug portfolio. With a 100% EPS beat rate and 77% of 29 analysts rating it a buy, the consensus target implies 24.8% upside from $963.33.

10. Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN)

Amazon rounds out the top 10 with a Q·Score of 8.1, driven by 74.8% earnings growth on 16.6% revenue growth — another case where profit is scaling faster than the top line. The profit margin of 12.2% is the lowest in this week's list, reflecting the inherently thinner-margin nature of its retail segment, though cloud and advertising businesses continue to lift overall profitability. Ninety-two percent of 62 analysts — the largest analyst coverage pool in this week's list — rate it a buy, with a consensus target implying 14.6% upside from $268.42.

Sector Breakdown

Technology dominates this week's top 10, claiming five of the ten spots (NVDA, MSFT, MU, AVGO, PLTR), while Communication Services accounts for three (META, GOOGL, NFLX). Healthcare and Consumer Cyclical each contribute one name, with Eli Lilly and Amazon respectively, underscoring how concentrated the highest Q·Scores currently are in tech-adjacent industries.


One to Watch

Micron Technology (MU) presents one of the more analytically interesting data profiles this week. The combination of 196.3% revenue growth, 756% earnings growth, and a forward P/E of just 5.3 is unusual — most companies with growth rates at that level carry much higher valuation multiples. The data suggests the market is pricing in a degree of cyclicality: memory chip businesses are historically boom-and-bust, and analysts appear to be discounting the current growth figures accordingly, which may explain why the consensus price target sits only 1.7% above the current price despite a near-universal buy rating. The 100% EPS beat rate and a profit margin of 41.5% add further texture to what the numbers are showing about where Micron sits in its current cycle.