The Best Fintech Stock to Invest $1,000 in Right Now

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Fintech stocks have made -- and erased -- small fortunes for many investors in recent years.

In 2020, many of these stocks doubled or tripled in value. Some saw their market caps soar by 1,000%. Those sudden rises were followed by dramatic falls, as many fintech stocks gave back all those gains.

This looks like a fantastic time to buy certain fintech stocks -- prominent among them, Nu Holdings (NYSE: NU). While it's not as cheap as some of the other options out there, it is, in my view, arguably the best place to invest $1,000 right now. During the coming years, its shares have tremendous upside potential as the company executes on its growth plans.

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Fintech businesses are exactly what they sound like: They combine financial services with technology. When they're managed right and offer compelling services, these businesses can grow rapidly for years, if not decades.

Consider PayPal. When it went public for the first time in early 2002, its services were revolutionary. Users could transfer money across the world in seconds. They could also use PayPal to safely buy and sell products and services online. At the time, relatively few people felt safe entering their credit card numbers into a computer. PayPal took the worry out of online transactions by creating a technological intermediary. If there was a problem with an order, PayPal could provide recourse.

Today, PayPal has more than 400 million active users. That's greater than the population of the U.S. And while its active user base has recently begun to shrink, PayPal enjoyed roughly two decades of consistent user growth. Financial services in general is a big business. When fintech companies like PayPal find ways to disrupt the status quo through clever technology and marketing, investors can generate huge profits.

The most promising fintech stock today is Nu Holdings. This company isn't all promise, either. It has a decade-long track record of success, and it built a multibillion-dollar business from scratch.

Nu was created in 2013 to disrupt Latin America's banking industry. At the time, the financial services market in the region was controlled by a handful of powerful players. These incumbents had no reason to rock the boat. They charged high premiums for simple services and earned reliable profits along the way without needing to invest in innovation.

Nu flipped everything on its head by forgoing physical branches, offering its services directly to anyone with a smartphone. As Doug Leone -- a partner at Sequoia Capital, an early investor in Nu -- explained, "At first, the competition failed to take Nubank seriously; they didn't understand the deep technological work involved in the backend of the deceptively simple user experience, and thought the company was nothing more than an app."