3 Stocks That Could Be Easy Wealth Builders

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Shopify is riding the unending wave of e-commerce growth, but is boosted by a shift in the way online sellers prefer to connect with customers.

  • C3.ai isn't the market's best-known artificial intelligence investment. It may be the market's best long-term AI investment, however, given its target market.

  • China's e-commerce powerhouse Alibaba is well positioned for prolonged growth on two different important fronts.

Contrary to a common assumption, making big investment gains doesn't necessarily require constant monitoring of your portfolio or taking on extreme risks. Scaling back your risk and dialing back your trading activity, in fact, could actually improve your overall performance. The key is simply finding the right buy-and-hold stocks and actually holding on to them long enough to let time do most of the work.

Here's a rundown of three stocks that not only offer above-average wealth-building potential, but are easy to own without frequent check-ins on how they're doing or the rhetoric surrounding them.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Continue »

1. Shopify

Still priced at more than 60 times this year's expected per-share earnings of $1.47 despite the stock's 26% pullback from its February peak, Shopify (NASDAQ: SHOP) could be an intimidating name to step into here.

Don't be scared though. Given its likely future, this may be all the discount you're going to get anytime soon.

Shopify helps businesses of all types and sizes establish their own e-commerce presence. It was largely launched as an alternative to Amazon's heavy-handed online mall, empowering its clients with tools ranging from inventory management, payment processing, marketing tools, and of course, online shopping carts.

Shopify's tech facilitated the sale of $293 billion worth of goods and services last year, translating into $8.9 billion worth of revenue for itself. Those figures were up 24% and 26% year over year, respectively, extending long-established growth trends.

As veteran investors can attest, nothing lasts forever. There will come a time when this company just can't sustain this sort of growth.

That time is nowhere on the near or distant horizon, though. Precedence Research predicts the global e-commerce market is set to grow at an annualized pace of nearly 15% through 2034. And, in light of the U.S. Census Bureau's data suggesting that only about 16% of the country's retail spending is done online (with a similar proportion applying overseas), that bullish outlook isn't tough to believe.