3 Stocks That Can Help You Get Richer in 2025 and Beyond

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We all would like to get richer, and it's hard to beat the power of the stock market for accomplishing that -- at least, over long periods. The simplest, and for most people, the best way to invest in stocks is via one or more low-fee, broad-market index funds. They can really be all you need. But if you want to aim for higher returns and can stomach more risk, consider adding some individual stocks to your mix.

Here then are three stocks to consider for your long-term portfolio. Each has been a solid performer, has plenty of potential for further growth, and has a reasonable, if not attractive, recent valuation.

1. PayPal

PayPal (NASDAQ: PYPL) is a juggernaut in the fintech (financial technology) realm. With a recent market value topping $70 billion, PayPal recently boasted 426 million active consumer and merchant accounts, $1.53 trillion in total payment volume, and 25 billion payment transactions (as of the end of 2023). Most of us are quite familiar with PayPal, which lets us pay for things electronically, but you may not realize that PayPal is also home to the popular Venmo payment app, as well as the Braintree, Paidy, Hyperwallet, and Zettle businesses, among others.

In the company's fourth quarter, it noted that its active accounts were down in number, slightly, by 2%. That's not great, but the fact that its number of payment transactions grew 13% year over year, while transactions per active account grew by 14%, is certainly good. As that stalled accounts number suggests, though, PayPal is struggling a bit at the moment and expects the current year to be a transition year. There's reason to be hopeful about it, because it has a new CEO (from Intuit).

PayPal's 2024 may not be phenomenal, but this is an attractive entry point for long-term believers because the stock price is quite cheap. Its price-to-sales (P/S) ratio was recently 2.45, well below its five-year average of 4.91, and its forward-looking, price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 12.9 was well below the five-year average of 22.8.

PayPal offers no dividend, but it has been rewarding shareholders by buying back a lot of stock, thereby making each remaining share more valuable. This stock has the potential to grow a lot in the coming years.

2. Nike

Nike (NYSE: NKE) is another very familiar name, and it's looking undervalued, too, with a recent P/S ratio of 2.8, below its five-year average of 4.0, and a forward P/E of 24.4, below its five-year average of 32.

Why is Nike so appealingly priced? Well, its stock was recently down some 27% from its 52-week high in part because the company's growth is slowing and it's facing significant competition. Given that it's a $140 billion-plus business, it's understandable that it can't grow like gangbusters. Still, there's a lot to like about Nike, and its future is quite promising.