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Stocks are hovering at an all-time high despite concerns about AI and the economy.
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Micron surged on its latest earnings report, but the stock got even cheaper.
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Dollar General is on the mend after a rough few years.
Heading into the end of 2025, the stock market seems to be at a crossroads. The S&P 500 is hovering near an all-time high, but after surging for the last three years, expectations of a pullback seem to be increasing.
Talk of an AI bubble has grown, leading to a sell-off in November, and the economy is showing clear signs of weakness. Consumer sentiment has tumbled, putting pressure on a number of retailers, and the labor market is struggling, with the unemployment rate hitting a four-year high.
In other words, this looks like the kind of stock market where the gap between winners and losers is growing. Keep reading to see two stocks that look like winners heading into 2026.
Memory chipmaker Micron (NASDAQ: MU) may have been an underrated AI play for the last few years, but the secret is out after the company’s latest earnings report.
Micron crushed estimates and gave even better guidance for its fiscal second quarter. Overall revenue jumped 57% to $13.6 billion, and its division with the most exposure to AI, cloud memory, grew by 100% to $5.3 billion. Demand continues to soar for its high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chips, which are a key component of the AI stack, and the company pulled forward its forecast for HBM growth, saying it now expected the total addressable market for HBMs to reach $100 billion by 2028, ahead of an earlier forecast of 2030.
In addition to the soaring revenue, Micron is also seeing its margins expand thanks to rising prices, lower costs, and a favorable product mix. Operating margin jumped from 25% to 45%, and adjusted earnings per share climbed from $1.79 to $4.78.
What really makes Micron worth doubling down on right now is its dirt cheap valuation, a sign that Wall Street has continued to underestimate the stock. Following the report, EPS estimates for fiscal 2026 jumped from $18.10 to $31.88, nearly quadrupling from the $8.29 it reported in the year before. Based on that estimate, the stock trades at less than 9 times forward earnings. Though that partly reflects a sector where pricing dynamics are notoriously cyclical, it also shows how cheap the stock is.
That should give investors confidence that the stock can still go significantly higher even as it just reached an all-time high.
Consumer-facing stocks might be under pressure, but the combination of persistent inflation and flat job growth has led to more Americans trading down to cheaper goods when they shop, and that’s good news for Dollar General (NYSE: DG).
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