Growth Stocks — Analysis & Key Financial Data
Growth investing targets companies that are expanding revenue and earnings faster than the broader market. Investors use growth strategies to participate in businesses that can compound value over time through market share gains, new products, or secular tailwinds, often accepting higher valuations in exchange for stronger topline and bottom-line momentum. Invest Viable screens for growth stocks using transparent criteria. The exact rule for this page: revenue growth greater than 15% year-over-year and earnings growth greater than 10% year-over-year. This focuses the list on companies with meaningful expansion on both the topline and profitability. Our Investment Score and base valuations remain available so you can weigh growth against quality and valuation. These criteria are screening filters only. They do not rank stocks by “best” or constitute investment advice. We show stocks that match the rule so you can research and decide what’s interesting.
- Stocks passing screen
- 483
- Latest data
- 2026-06-28
Highest Investment Scores in Growth Stocks
Top-rated stocks by Investment Score
- Price
- $91.19
- Fair Value
- $355.29
- Market Cap
- $21.2B
- Margin
- +289.6%
- Price
- $175.25
- Fair Value
- $263.72
- Market Cap
- $2.3B
- Margin
- +50.5%
- Price
- $23.62
- Fair Value
- $16.75
- Market Cap
- $29.0B
- Margin
- -29.1%
- Price
- $15.21
- Fair Value
- $325.28
- Market Cap
- $9.8B
- Margin
- +2038.6%
Growth Stock List
| Company | Price | Fair Value | Score | Market Cap | P/E | EPS | Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
York Space Systems, Inc. YSS | $24.11 | — | 19 | $3.4B | -14.0 | $-1.41 | 0.00% |
Rezolve AI PLC RZLV | $2.60 | — | 19 | $645M | -6.5 | $-0.30 | 0.00% |
Critical Metals Corp. CRML | $10.27 | — | 19 | $933M | -21.7 | $-0.46 | 0.00% |
Quantinuum Inc. Class A Common Stock QNT | $72.84 | — | 19 | $2.4B | -55.6 | $-1.36 | 0.00% |
Rhythm Pharmaceuticals, Inc. RYTM | $110.04 | — | 19 | $7.5B | -35.1 | $-2.98 | 0.00% |
Syndax Pharmaceuticals, Inc. SNDX | $21.78 | — | 16 | $1.9B | -7.6 | $-2.81 | 0.00% |
Forgent Power Solutions, Inc. FPS | $54.99 | — | 16 | $13.5B | 12820.9 | $0.02 | 0.00% |
Neonc Technologies Holdings, Inc. NTHI | $4.43 | — | 16 | $92M | -2.4 | $-1.66 | 0.00% |
About growth-style screening
Growth investing is the long-running counterpart to value investing — the idea that paying up for a business expanding rapidly can produce better long-term returns than buying a slow-growing business at a discount, provided the growth is durable and the price isn't too far above what the future cash flows can support. The screen on this page is a mechanical implementation of growth's first criterion: confirmed expansion. Whether the growth is durable and whether the price is reasonable are separate questions the screener doesn't answer in its single rule.
The two-threshold structure is deliberate. Revenue growth above 15% on its own would surface businesses chasing top-line targets at the cost of margin compression — a pattern visible across cycles in software, retail, and parts of consumer discretionary. Earnings growth above 10% on its own would surface businesses cutting costs into a flat or declining revenue base. The combination filters for businesses where both lines are moving in the right direction, which is the underlying signal investors usually want growth-style screening to capture.
Sector exposure inside this list tilts heavily toward Technology, Communication Services, and parts of Healthcare and Consumer Discretionary, which is where above-trend growth most often shows up structurally.
What this page is for
This page is a screener and reference surface, not editorial coverage. The list above refreshes with each data update; the methodology, FAQ, and related categories below stay in place so the page is useful both for somebody arriving from a specific search and for somebody scanning growth-style names for the first time.
If you want to value a single stock end-to-end with adjustable assumptions rather than scan the screen, the Invest Viable Valuator walks through the same models we use to compute the base valuations on this page.
How we screen for growth stocks
A stock passes the growth screen when its trailing revenue growth is above 15% and its trailing earnings growth is above 10%. The screen surfaces companies expanding both top line and bottom line at meaningful rates simultaneously.
revenueGrowth > 15% AND earningsGrowth > 10%
- Both thresholds are applied to trailing twelve-month figures from our data pipeline. Forward-growth estimates are not part of the screen.
- Revenue growth above 15% with earnings growth above 10% is a stricter combination than either threshold alone. Companies that grow revenue rapidly but at the cost of margin compression don't pass; neither do companies expanding margin without revenue acceleration.
- The screen does not adjust for sector — a 15% growth rate is high for a utility and modest for early-stage software. Sector-level context is available on the related sector pages.
Frequently asked questions
What does "growth style" mean on Invest Viable?
A two-condition screen — trailing revenue growth above 15% AND trailing earnings growth above 10%. The combination is the point. Revenue growth alone can mask margin compression; earnings growth alone can come from cost cuts on a flat-revenue base. Together the two thresholds surface businesses where the top line is expanding meaningfully and the bottom line is keeping pace or accelerating.
Why these specific thresholds?
15% revenue growth is roughly where market multiples start meaningfully separating "growth" names from broader large-caps; 10% earnings growth is the rough mid-point of long-run S&P 500 earnings growth, set as a floor to ensure earnings expansion is real rather than just keeping up with inflation. The thresholds are mechanical and sector-uniform.
How is growth style different from the Nasdaq 100 page?
The Nasdaq-100 is an index of the 100 largest non-financial Nasdaq-listed companies. Many constituents are growth-style by current metrics but several are mature businesses no longer growing at growth-style rates. Growth style is rule-based and applies the same threshold to every covered name regardless of index membership.
Are growth stocks always expensive on traditional multiples?
Often yes — high-growth businesses tend to trade at higher P/E and price-to-revenue multiples, sometimes very high ones. Our base valuations apply DCF and multiple-based methods that account for growth in the cash-flow projections; the Investment Score evaluates underlying business quality independently of valuation. A high-growth name can pass the growth screen and have a negative margin of safety if the market is pricing optimistic assumptions.
Does Invest Viable recommend specific growth stocks?
No. This page is a screener and analysis surface, not a recommendation list. Each stock is shown with its underlying financial data, base valuation, and Investment Score so you can do your own research. Invest Viable does not publish buy or sell calls on individual securities.