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5 Top Stocks to Buy in March

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2025 has gotten off to a choppy start as some of the most valuable U.S.-based companies are dragging down the major stock market indexes. But getting caught up in short-term market movements is a mistake.

By focusing on companies with strong fundamentals that can deliver on expectations, you can filter out the noise and grow closer to reaching your financial goals.

Here's why four Motley Fool contributors think chip giants Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) and Micron Technologies (NASDAQ: MU), travel services company Airbnb (NASDAQ: ABNB), biotech behemoth Vertex Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: VRTX), and high-yield dividend stock Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE: EPD) are worth buying in March.

Abstract rendering of binary code in several different patterns and colors.
Image source: Getty Images.

The sell-off in Nvidia stock is a buying opportunity

Daniel Foelber (Nvidia): Despite blow-out results and upbeat guidance, Nvidia's stock price fell 8.5% last Thursday after reporting fourth-quarter and full-year fiscal 2025 results.

The headline figures are nothing short of jaw-dropping. Revenue grew 114% compared to fiscal 2024. Data center revenue was up 16% compared to just one quarter ago, and overall revenue was up 12% versus Q3 fiscal 2025. Gross margins for the quarter were 73% -- down three percentage points from Q4 fiscal 2024. But because revenue was so much higher, operating income grew 77%, and diluted earnings per share (EPS) jumped 82%.

For Q1 fiscal 2026, Nvidia is guiding for $43 billion in revenue, which would be a 65.4% increase from Q1 fiscal 2025. However, gross margins are expected to fall from 78.4% to 70.6%.

Perhaps Nvidia sold off because investors were pricing the stock for perfection or getting too caught up in margin deterioration. But those factors aren't the main focus for long-term investors.

Nvidia continues to grow at a torrid rate when many other megacap, tech-focused companies are seeing growth pullback or are spending record amounts on capital expenditures to try and keep up in the artificial intelligence (AI) race. The longer Nvidia's stock price languishes while its earnings continue to grow, the cheaper its valuation will become.

Based on trailing earnings, Nvidia is more expensive than other megacap, tech-focused companies like Microsoft, Apple, and Amazon. But because Nvidia is growing so quickly, its forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio, which is based on analyst consensus estimates for the next year, is surprisingly lower than those three companies, as well as Tesla and fellow chip giant Broadcom.

TSLA PE Ratio (Forward) Chart
Data by YCharts.

Now, the glass-half-empty outlook on Nvidia is that its gross margins are falling, and its growth rate is unsustainable if major customers like Amazon, Microsoft, Apple, and Meta Platforms pull back on spending, or if there's a cyclical downturn in the semiconductor industry.