The Ultimate Growth Stock to Buy With $1,000 Right Now

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While making a $1,000 investment in any given stock may not sound like a game-changing retirement proposition, I like to view this sum's potential through the eyes of my 8-year-old daughter. By adding $1,000 to a given investment annually -- or roughly $20 a week -- for the next 50 years, her retirement nest egg could grow to over $2.6 million, assuming market-matching returns of 12%.

Should we dream of beating the market by a mere 2 percentage points, this $2.6 million figure would double.

One investment currently offering this combination of outperformance potential alongside a decades-long growth runway is Uber Technologies (NYSE: UBER). Tripling in value since the start of 2023, Uber's stock has been firing on all cylinders.

Understandably, this rapid increase leaves many investors wondering if they missed the buying opportunity. However, the best could still be ahead as Uber's network effects become ever stronger and its growth optionality continues to multiply. Here is what makes the company a tremendous buy-and-hold forever growth stock.

Uber's network is scaling and generating a ton of cash

Moving people and things from point A to point B in more than 70 countries, Uber provided 9.4 billion trips in 2023 while generating $37 billion in revenue -- figures that grew by 24% and 17%, respectively, compared to 2022. Home to a massive two-sided network that pairs roughly 7 million drivers with 150 million monthly active platform consumers, Uber operates through three business segments:

  • Mobility (56% of sales in Q4 2023): This segment is ultimately what the "Uber" verb is famous for, consisting of ridesharing, carsharing, micromobility, rentals, public transit, taxis, and more. As the company's most mature business line, it acts as the profit center, generating a 26% adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) margin in the fourth quarter.

  • Delivery (31% of sales): Uber's second-largest unit consists of its grocery, retail, and alcohol delivery sales along with its Uber Eats deliveries for restaurants. It recorded a 15% adjusted EBITDA margin in Q4 and has grown its gross bookings eightfold since 2018.

  • Freight (13% of sales): Near breakeven on an adjusted EBITDA basis, Uber's on-demand freight platform aims to reimagine the logistics industry by providing an end-to-end transportation network that matches shippers with carriers. According to Bloomberg, this unit was considered a spin-off candidate in 2023, highlighting the growth optionality present in Uber's platform and all the data within it.