2 Monster Stocks to Hold for the Next 20 Years

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Investing in the right growth stocks can be game changers for your retirement goals. Ideally, you want to invest in companies benefiting from powerful megatrends in the economy. Here are two extraordinary companies doing exciting things that could deliver monster returns for patient shareholders over the next few decades.

1. Tesla

Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) was one of the best-performing stocks over the last decade. If you had bought shares when Tesla first launched the Model S in 2012, you would be sitting on a 16,900% gain at the time of writing. While it still has opportunities to grow car sales over the next decade, its work on artificial intelligence (AI) could become the company's most valuable asset in the next 20 years.

It's a common mistake for investors to think that just because a stock has risen by a huge amount it can't continue to rise in value. Tesla's recent surge in share price reflects expectations for a return to growth as electric car demand recovers and the company launches a robotaxi service. But Tesla also has other irons in the fire that provide the company a lot of upside optionality over time.

One example is Tesla's humanoid robot. The investments the company has made in AI training for its electric cars are paving the way for other autonomous products like Optimus. CEO Elon Musk claims that Tesla is the only company with the assets to scale these robots for mass production.

"I mean, as I have said a few times, I think the long-term value of Optimus will exceed that of everything else at Tesla combined," Musk said on the second-quarter earnings call. For perspective, Tesla generated $12 billion in profit on $97 billion of revenue, primarily from selling cars and energy solutions over the last year. There could be tremendous demand for Optimus over the long term, given that more companies continue to install robotics in their operations almost every year, not to mention the potential for consumer demand.

Of course, there is the pending launch of Cybercab, which was officially unveiled in October. Management expects the robotaxi to launch in Texas and potentially California as early as 2025 assuming it receives regulatory approval. It should benefit the stock, as it would help Tesla further scale its automotive production and grow profits.

Investors have already started to price in a recovery in EV sales next year, along with the possible launch of Cybercab. Tesla's automotive revenue returned to growth last quarter, but analysts expect revenue growth to accelerate to 16% in 2025, according to Yahoo! Finance. Great companies are usually going to surprise to the upside, which is why I would continue to hold this extraordinary stock for more return potential over the next 20 years.