The Top 10

1. NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA)

With a Q·Score of 9.2 — the highest on this week's list — NVIDIA's data profile is defined by scale and consistency. Revenue growth of 85.2% and earnings growth of 214.5% year-over-year sit alongside a profit margin of 63% and a return on equity (the profit generated relative to shareholder investment) of 114.3%. All 58 covering analysts have rated it a buy, and the company has beaten earnings-per-share estimates in 100% of recent quarters. The forward P/E — the stock's price relative to expected future earnings — stands at 16.7, which analysts' consensus price targets imply leaves roughly 40.6% upside from the current price of $211.14.

2. Meta Platforms, Inc. (META)

Meta scores 8.9, with 89% of 59 analysts carrying a buy rating and a consensus upside of 30.7% from $632.51. The numbers show revenue growing at 33.1% and earnings at 62.4%, while a profit margin of 32.8% reflects the high-margin nature of digital advertising at scale. The forward P/E of 17.5 is notably modest relative to that earnings growth rate, a dynamic that the Q·Score's valuation component weighs meaningfully.

3. Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL)

Alphabet's 8.6 score is underpinned by a combination of earnings discipline and analyst conviction: 89% of 53 analysts rate it a buy, and the company has beaten EPS estimates in 100% of tracked quarters. Earnings growth of 82% against revenue growth of 21.8% signals significant margin expansion — the profit margin sits at 37.9%. At a forward P/E of 26.2 and a current price of $380.34, the analyst consensus implies 13.2% upside, the narrowest gap in this week's top three.

4. Microsoft Corporation (MSFT)

Microsoft's 8.5 score reflects a profile built on consistency rather than explosive growth. Revenue is up 18.3% and earnings 23.4%, but the company has beaten EPS estimates in 100% of recent quarters — a track record that feeds directly into the Q·Score's earnings reliability component. A profit margin of 39.3% and return on equity of 34% illustrate the durability of its cloud and software business model. The forward P/E of 23.3 sits at a modest premium to the broader market, with 95% of 54 analysts holding a buy rating.

5. Broadcom Inc. (AVGO)

Broadcom scores 8.4, with 94% of 44 analysts rating it a buy and a perfect 100% EPS beat rate. Revenue growth of 29.5% and earnings growth of 31.6% reflect the company's expanding footprint in custom AI chips and networking infrastructure. The data shows the narrowest consensus upside in the top five — 7.9% from $446.77 — suggesting the market has already priced in a meaningful portion of near-term expectations. The profit margin of 36.6% underscores the high-value nature of its semiconductor product mix.

6. Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN)

Amazon's 8.3 score tells a story of earnings leverage: revenue growth of 16.6% has translated into earnings growth of 74.8%, a gap that reflects the maturing profitability of Amazon Web Services (AWS) and improving retail margins. The profit margin of 12.2% is the lowest in this week's top 10, but the return on equity of 24.3% and 94% buy ratio among 62 analysts — the largest analyst coverage pool on the list — indicate broad institutional confidence in the trajectory. The forward P/E is 27.4.

7. Palantir Technologies Inc. (PLTR)

Palantir's 8.3 score comes with a notably different profile from its peers. Earnings growth of 325% and a profit margin of 43.7% are striking, but the forward P/E of 75.5 is by far the highest on this week's list — meaning the market is pricing in a substantial amount of future growth. The buy ratio of 61% among 27 analysts is also the lowest here, suggesting a wider range of views on valuation. The data shows a 100% EPS beat rate and revenue growth of 84.7%, which the Q·Score's momentum components reflect strongly.

8. Netflix, Inc. (NFLX)

Netflix scores 8.3 with the second-largest consensus upside on the list — 33.2% from a current price of $86.02. Earnings growth of 86.4% against revenue growth of 16.2% points to significant operating leverage as the advertising-supported tier scales. The return on equity of 48.5% is among the strongest on this week's list. The EPS beat rate of 50% is the lowest in the top 10, which is one factor that tempers the score relative to peers with more consistent quarterly delivery.

9. Micron Technology, Inc. (MU)

Micron presents the most statistically unusual data point in this week's list: earnings growth of 756% year-over-year, driven by the memory chip cycle's recovery and surging AI-related demand for high-bandwidth memory (HBM). Revenue growth of 196.3% and a forward P/E of just 9.2 — the lowest here by a wide margin — reflect a market that is pricing in cyclical risk despite the current momentum. Notably, the analyst consensus price target implies a negative upside of -27.6% from the current price of $971, meaning the stock has, by the data, outrun near-term consensus targets. The 89% buy ratio among 40 analysts and 100% EPS beat rate still produce a Q·Score of 8.2.

10. Visa Inc. (V)

Visa closes the top 10 with an 8.1 score anchored by financial quality metrics: a profit margin of 51.7% and return on equity of 60.3% are among the highest on this week's list, reflecting the asset-light economics of payment network infrastructure. Revenue growth of 17.1% and earnings growth of 35.5% are steady rather than explosive, and the 100% EPS beat rate across tracked quarters signals reliable execution. With 92% of 35 analysts holding a buy rating and a consensus upside of 22.2% from $326.36, the data shows consistent institutional confidence.

Sector Breakdown

Technology dominates this week with five of the top 10 entries (NVDA, MSFT, AVGO, PLTR, MU), while Communication Services accounts for three (META, GOOGL, NFLX). Consumer Cyclical and Financial Services each contribute one name, with Amazon and Visa respectively rounding out a list that skews heavily toward large-cap, digitally-native business models.


One to Watch

Micron Technology (MU) stands out as the most data-rich story in this week's list. The numbers show earnings growth of 756% and revenue growth of 196.3% — figures that reflect the dramatic swing in the memory semiconductor cycle — alongside a forward P/E of just 9.2, which is unusually low for a company posting those growth rates. What makes the data particularly notable is the divergence: despite a Q·Score of 8.2, a 100% EPS beat rate, and 89% analyst buy coverage, the consensus price target sits 27.6% below the current market price of $971. That gap indicates that analysts, in aggregate, believe the stock has moved ahead of where the fundamentals currently justify — a tension between strong trailing momentum and forward valuation that the raw numbers lay out in unusually sharp relief.