2 ‘Strong Buy’ Stocks Showing Monster Growth

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Investors are in the stock market to find growth, returns, and profits, and the last year has brought plenty of that. The S&P 500 and NASDAQ both finished last week at near record high. The indexes are up 25% for the year.

The gains have not come easy. Stocks are gaining for now, while the Fed continues to hold interest rates low and inflation has jumped to a 30-year high. Cash is simply not a good investment, as savings’ real yields are turning negative and rising prices are eating away at purchasing power. Even Treasury bonds – long considered a safe haven investment – are only yielding 1.5%, just one-quarter of the annualized inflation rate.

This leaves stocks, and especially those stocks with a growth-oriented reputation or potential, as the only game in town for investors seeking a strong upside.

We’ve used the TipRanks platform to look up two such stocks. A look at their details, along with commentary from the Wall Street analysts, should tell why they are such compelling buys.

Arcus Biosciences (RCUS)

We’ll look first at Arcus, a clinical-stage biotech company, developing new molecules to act in combination therapies in the treatment of cancer. The company’s drug candidates are immunotherapy products; four leading candidates are subjects of 12 active research tracks, ranging from early Phase 1 to Phase 3/Pivotal studies.

The research pipeline includes four small molecule drug candidates; etrumadenan, ad dual A2aR/A2bR antagonist; quemliclustat, a CD73 inhibitor; domvanalimab, a TIGIT mAb; and zimberelimab, PD-1 mAb. The drug candidates are being evaluated in multiple, overlapping clinical trials, in various combinations with each other. The clinical trials are testing the therapeutic agents against a variety of cancers, including non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), colorectal cancer (CRC), castrate-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC), and pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC).

Arcus is pursuing several of these tracks in partnership with larger pharmaceutical companies. Collaborators include Taiho, which has an option to commercialize Arcus’ products in Japan, and Gilead, with whom Arcus announced a 10-year partnership beginning last year.

That partnership with Gilead has brought Arcus its major recent catalyst. The company’s stock has been rising all year (up 83% year-to-date) on the strength of its research pipeline – but last week, it jumped over 20% when Gilead announced that it was moving to exercise its development and commercialization rights on several of Arcus’ experimental medications. The announcement came 8 months earlier than expected and shows Gilead’s confidence in Arcus’ pipeline. Arcus stands to receive option payments from Gilead, up to $725 million.