The Top 10

1. NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA)

NVIDIA holds the week's highest Q·Score at 9.2 ("Very Bullish"), underpinned by some of the most striking numbers in the entire list: revenue growth of 85.2%, earnings growth of 214.5%, and a profit margin of 63%. The return on equity — a measure of how efficiently a company generates profit from shareholders' funds — stands at 114.3%, an unusually high figure that reflects the company's capital-light, high-demand position in AI chip supply. All 58 analysts tracked have beaten earnings-per-share estimates 100% of the time in recent quarters, and 95% currently carry a buy-equivalent rating, with a consensus price target implying 37.2% upside to the current price of $215.33.

2. Meta Platforms, Inc. (META)

Meta scores 8.9, supported by 33.1% revenue growth and earnings growth of 62.4% — numbers that reflect the ongoing monetisation of its advertising infrastructure across Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. Its forward P/E (the price relative to expected earnings over the next twelve months) of 16.9 is notably low for a company growing at this pace, which the score partially reflects. Of 58 analysts, 89% rate it a buy equivalent, with a consensus target pointing to 35.5% upside from the current $610.26.

3. Microsoft Corporation (MSFT)

Microsoft's Q·Score of 8.7 is built on consistency rather than explosive growth: revenue is up 18.3% and earnings 23.4%, but the profit margin of 39.3% and a 100% EPS beat rate across tracked quarters signal reliable execution. With 95% of 54 analysts at a buy-equivalent rating and a forward P/E of 21.6, the data reflects a business where cloud and AI integration (Azure, Copilot) continues to compound steadily. The consensus target implies 33.9% upside to the current price of $418.57.

4. Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL)

Alphabet scores 8.6 on the back of 82% earnings growth — a figure that stands out given the company's already enormous profit base — alongside a 37.9% profit margin and a return on equity of 38.9%. Revenue grew 21.8%, and the company has beaten EPS estimates 100% of the time in recent quarters across 53 analyst estimates. The forward P/E of 26.5 is the highest among the top four, which may explain why the consensus upside estimate of 12% is more modest than peers despite the strong underlying numbers.

5. Palantir Technologies Inc. (PLTR)

Palantir ties Alphabet at 8.6 but presents a very different data profile. Earnings growth of 325% and a 100% EPS beat rate are eye-catching, and the profit margin of 43.7% shows the business has scaled into profitability. However, the forward P/E of 66.0 is the highest on this week's list by a wide margin — meaning the market is pricing in a significant amount of future growth. Only 61% of the 27 analysts tracked carry a buy-equivalent rating, the lowest buy ratio in the top 10, which the score accounts for alongside the strong fundamental momentum.

6. Broadcom Inc. (AVGO)

Broadcom's Q·Score of 8.5 reflects a business that combines solid growth with high analyst conviction: 94% of 44 analysts rate it a buy equivalent, and the company has beaten EPS estimates 100% of the time. Revenue grew 29.5% and earnings 31.6%, with a profit margin of 36.6%. The forward P/E of 22.7 sits in the middle of the pack, and the consensus target implies 16% upside to the current price of $414.14 — a more measured figure than some peers, but supported by broad analyst agreement.

7. Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN)

Amazon scores 8.3 ("Bullish"), with earnings growth of 74.8% standing in contrast to a profit margin of 12.2% — a reminder that Amazon's blended business (retail, AWS cloud, advertising) carries structurally lower margins than pure-software peers. Return on equity of 24.3% and revenue growth of 16.6% round out a picture of a large business still expanding at meaningful scale. With 94% of 62 analysts — the largest analyst coverage pool in this week's list — at a buy-equivalent rating, the data reflects broad institutional attention.

8. Netflix, Inc. (NFLX)

Netflix shares the 8.3 score with Amazon but arrives there differently. Earnings growth of 86.4% and a return on equity of 48.5% are among the stronger figures in the lower half of this week's list, and the forward P/E of 23.1 is relatively contained for that growth rate. The EPS beat rate of 50% is the lowest in the top 10, meaning analysts have found this business harder to model accurately in recent quarters. The consensus target implies 29.3% upside to the current price of $88.60, with 74% of 44 analysts at a buy-equivalent rating.

9. Micron Technology, Inc. (MU)

Micron's Q·Score of 8.2 comes with the most unusual data combination of the week. Revenue growth of 196.3% and earnings growth of 756% reflect a memory chip cycle recovery from a deeply depressed base — context that matters when reading those headline figures. The forward P/E of 7.3 is the lowest on the entire list by a significant margin, indicating the market is pricing in relatively modest future earnings relative to current levels. Notably, the consensus price target sits 18.3% below the current price of $751, the only negative upside figure in this week's top 10, yet 89% of 40 analysts still carry a buy-equivalent rating.

10. Visa Inc. (V)

Visa closes the top 10 with a Q·Score of 8.0, anchored by the strongest profit margin in the list at 51.7% and a return on equity of 60.3% — metrics that reflect the company's position as a payment network that processes transactions without taking on credit risk. Revenue grew 17.1% and earnings 35.5%, with a 100% EPS beat rate across 35 analysts. The forward P/E of 22.1 and a consensus upside of 21.2% to the current price of $328.88 round out a profile characterised by steady, high-quality financial metrics.

Sector Breakdown

Technology dominates this week with five of the top 10 names (NVDA, MSFT, PLTR, AVGO, MU), while Communication Services accounts for three (META, GOOGL, NFLX) — together, these two sectors represent eight of the ten highest Q·Scores. Consumer Cyclical (AMZN) and Financial Services (V) each contribute one name, with no representation from Energy, Healthcare, Industrials, or Real Estate this week.


One to Watch

Micron Technology (MU) presents the most analytically complex data story in this week's list. The combination of 196.3% revenue growth, 756% earnings growth, and a forward P/E of just 7.3 reflects the volatile nature of the semiconductor memory cycle — when demand recovers from a trough, the numbers can look extraordinary in percentage terms. What makes the data particularly notable is the divergence between analyst ratings and price targets: 89% of 40 analysts carry a buy-equivalent rating, yet the consensus target implies the stock is currently trading above where analysts expect it to be in twelve months, producing the only negative upside figure (-18.3%) in this week's top 10. The Q·Score of 8.2 captures the strong fundamental momentum while the valuation and target data illustrate the complexity of interpreting cyclical recovery numbers in isolation.