Should You Forget BigBear.ai and Buy These 2 Millionaire-Maker Stocks Instead?

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BigBear.ai (NYSE: BBAI), a developer of artificial intelligence (AI)-oriented analytics tools, has taken its investors on a wild ride since it went public by merging with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) three years ago. The combined company's stock opened at $9.84, rose to a record high of $12.69 in April 2022, but sank below $1 by December 2022.

Like many SPAC-backed start-ups, BigBear.ai overpromised and underdelivered. It originally claimed it could grow its revenue from $182 million in 2021 to $388 million in 2023, but its revenue only rose from $146 million to $155 million during that period. It blamed that slowdown on macroeconomic headwinds, competition, and the bankruptcy of its major customer Virgin Orbit in 2023. CEO Reggie Brothers also stepped down in late 2022.

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Image source: Getty Images.

BigBear.ai has shown some signs of stabilization under its current CEO, Mandy Long, but it's still a highly speculative stock. For 2024, analysts expect its revenue to rise 8% as its adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) approaches breakeven. For 2025, they expect its revenue to rise 14% to $192.5 million as it achieves a positive adjusted EBITDA of $4.8 million. A lot of that growth should be driven by new government contracts.

That progress is encouraging, but BigBear.ai's enterprise value of $1.2 billion still values it at more than 240 times this year's adjusted EBITDA. That premium valuation could limit its near-term success and prevent it from delivering millionaire-making gains. So instead of taking a chance on BigBear.ai's long-shot comeback, investors might be better off buying some shares of these two potential millionaire-makers instead: Nu Holdings (NYSE: NU) and PDD Holdings (NASDAQ: PDD).

Nu Holdings

Nu owns the largest digital bank in Latin America. As a digital-only bank, it expanded much faster than its brick-and-mortar competitors. Its total number of customers more than tripled from 33.3 million at the end of 2021 to 109.7 million in the third quarter of 2024.

Nu's activity rate (its active customers divided by total customers) rose from 76% to 84% during the same period as it rolled out more checking, credit card, lending, insurance, investment, cryptocurrency, and business-oriented services. It also tethered more retailers to its Nubank Shopping e-commerce app, which hit 255 million visits in 2023.

As Nu gains more customers, it's rolling out more AI tools to analyze its customer data, run chatbots, and strengthen its own cybersecurity defenses. It even launched its own cellular service, NuCel, to draw more customers to its mobile apps.