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Is Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) One of the Best High Growth Stocks?

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We recently published a list of 13 High Growth Large Cap Stocks To Invest In. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMD) stands against other best high growth stocks to invest in.

After two years of 25%+ gains, some investors worry that stocks are overvalued. Historically, the third year of a bull market is not usually spectacular, but it is not typically negative either. A lot depends on factors like interest rates and global tensions. According to Morgan Stanley, investor sentiment has maintained a familiar pattern over the years, with pessimism in late 2022, skepticism throughout 2023 even as stocks soared, and now, growing optimism for 2025. The real turning point could be AI. If businesses embrace artificial intelligence the way they did the internet in the late ’90s, it could result in a productivity boom that keeps the market rally going. As for stocks, big tech still reigns supreme, but valuations are much lower than during the dotcom bubble, making them less risky. Still, Morgan Stanley believes a smart strategy for 2025 might be balancing tech investments with financials and industrials to stay diversified.

In 2024, large-cap growth stocks in the United States had another strong year, with the Russell Growth Index climbing 33.4%, mostly powered by a concentrated group of major tech and communication companies, commonly known as the Magnificent Seven. By December, these handful of stocks were responsible for a huge chunk of the gains. Growth stocks kept their winning streak in the fourth quarter, outpacing value stocks by 9.2%, according to a report by LSEG. Over the past decade, they have consistently beat the Russell Value index, averaging 7% higher annual returns.

Investors are on edge as trade policies shake up the market, wiping out $4 trillion from recent highs. Fears of an economic slowdown have triggered a major sell-off, with the broader market dropping 2.7%, its worst day of the year, while the Nasdaq plunged 4% on March 10. Since peaking in February, the wider market has fallen 8.6% as of March 10, inching toward correction territory. Tech stocks, which drove market gains in 2023 and 2024, are also struggling in 2025, pulling major indexes down. Hedge funds are also backing away, cutting stock exposure at the fastest rate in over two years. Optimism around pro-growth policies has receded as uncertainty blooms in the market. Even with recent losses, stock valuations remain near record highs, leaving investors bracing for more volatility ahead.