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The Best Stocks to Invest $1,000 in Right Now

Are you just as afraid of a market pullback right now as you are of missing out on upside? If so, you're not alone. This is a confusing environment for investors. Major names like Nvidia and Home Depot are sending mixed messages, while the market itself seems to be waiting for more clarity about tariffs and the Trump administration's trade war.

There are some tickers with bullish backstories, though, that are bigger than any environmental or economic backdrop. You just have to look a bit off the beaten path to find them.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Learn More »

If you've got $1,000 -- or any other amount of money -- lying around available to invest, here are three solid prospects to consider.

An investor considering stocks to buy.

Image source: Getty Images.

CRISPR Therapeutics

Biotech stocks can be tricky investments to handle. Oftentimes, you're betting on a potentially game-changing premise well before it's profitable, or even before there's a marketable product. That's obviously risky. But the potential upside can be tremendous.

CRISPR Therapeutics (NASDAQ: CRSP) is not yet profitable, but the underlying science that makes the drugs it's currently developing possible holds enough promise to eventually get the company out of the red and into the black.

CRISPR Therapeutics specializes in gene editing. Company co-founder Dr. Emmanuelle Charpentier developed a way to cut a strand of damaged DNA and then force the genetic code's own built-in repair process to fix what's broken. While CRISPR's Casgevy (for the treatment of sickle cell disease and beta thalassemia) is its only approved drug based on this science, this biotechnology has a range of potential applications. Treating cancer and autoimmune diseases is arguably the biggest.

That any drugs based on this science have been approved bodes well for the concept, and CRISPR's got a total of five different clinical trials underway right now. Those are what most interested investors are eyeing. Ditto analysts, who collectively sport a consensus price target of $77.38, more than twice the stock's present price.

So why are CRISPR Therapeutics shares still drifting lower from their 2021 peak, knocking on the door of new 52-week lows? That's just part of the challenge of buying, holding, and even selling biotech stocks. Sometimes they reflect potential revenue and earnings too soon. Other times, investors lose interest when they've waited a little too long for results.

Don't overthink it, though. Just take a step back and recognize that analysts expect revenue to jump from $50 million this year to nearly $200 million next year and then to more than double again the year after that. This explosive growth should come on the heels of at least one more drug approval, although more than one approval is just as possible.

This growth will presumably stir up a bullish tailwind for the stock.

Palo Alto Networks

There's no sensational singular bullish argument for owning a stake in Palo Alto Networks (NASDAQ: PANW). There are dozens of solid reasons, though.

On the unlikely chance you've never heard of it, Palo Alto is a cybersecurity company. Firewalls, VPNs, threat detection, and breach response are all in its wheelhouse. There's nothing unique about its offerings, even if the company is the biggest and best-known name in the cybersecurity industry, that's more than reached full maturity.

That's not necessarily a bad thing, however, given the nature of this business.

Think about it. As the world uses computers more and more, it's going to need more and more cybersecurity solutions. That's why Precedence Research believes the global cybersecurity market is set to grow at an annualized pace of 12.6% through 2034. Palo Alto's top line is expected to slightly outpace this industry growth based on the consensus analyst forecast, but only slightly. There's little doubt that it will be able to leverage its size to achieve at least its fair share of this growth, though. Again, cybersecurity is a business that's unlikely to go away.

Don't tarry if you're interested. While this stock looks a bit frothy following its big rebound from its March low, it's still only priced around its early-2024 peak. The lack of net forward progress since then is sure to be catching the eye of many would-be buyers.

NextEra Energy

Finally, add utility name NextEra Energy (NYSE: NEE) to your list of stocks to buy with an idle $1,000.

Utility stocks are usually anything but exciting. That's because the highly regulated industry is anything but a high-growth one, and the business itself hasn't changed much since its inception. Ditto its individual companies. In many cases, these outfits are not only working with the same infrastructure they were working with decades ago, but they're also grappling with legacy capital structures and mindsets.

Not NextEra Energy, though. Although its roots are traditional, over the course of the past several years, this organization has made a deliberate effort not just to embrace cleaner, renewable energy sources, but also to evolve its utility business in a way that makes sense in the modern era. As of the end of last year, more than half of its power production comes from renewables like wind and solar, while roughly one-third comes from natural gas. Another 8% is nuclear, which President Donald Trump just gave a boost to last month with four executive orders aimed at revitalizing the U.S. nuclear energy sector.

Notice fossil fuels aren't part of the mix.

And yet, even though the company is spending more on energy infrastructure than any other utility outfit, it's still profitable.

This utility outfit is largely future-proof. That is to say, even though how utilities will be regulated and restricted by future emissions mandates isn't completely clear right now, all of NextEra Energy's future power production will likely satisfy whatever requirements await.

There won't be any explosive growth from NextEra, in the near or distant future. There should be plenty of reliable growth here, however, regardless of the economic environment.

There's also a respectable amount of reliable recurring income. Newcomers will be stepping into this stock while its forward-looking dividend yield stands at just under 3.4%. Not bad.

That's based on a dividend, by the way, that's more than doubled over the past 10 years and been raised every year for well over two decades. Even if dividend income isn't your big goal right now, this is reliable cash flow that you can use to buy stocks as other opportunities arise.

Should you invest $1,000 in Palo Alto Networks right now?

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James Brumley has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends CRISPR Therapeutics, Home Depot, NextEra Energy, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool recommends Palo Alto Networks. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Cathie Wood Goes Bargain Hunting: 3 Stocks She Just Bought

Growth stocks have been rallying in recent weeks, and that's usually great news for Cathie Wood. The founder, CEO, and stock-picking ace of the Ark Invest family of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) has momentum on her side. Her largest fund has soared nearly 30% since bottoming out last month, but starting lines matter. That same fund would have to more than triple to get back to its all-time highs set four years ago.

Wood did a fair amount of buying as the market moved higher on Wednesday. She added to existing stakes in Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD), and CRISPR Therapuetics (NASDAQ: CRSP). Let's take a closer look at Wood's latest purchases.

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Continue »

1. Nvidia

The country's third most valuable company by market cap is a study in contrasts. It's a wealth-altering 13-bagger over the past five years, but it has also surrendered 13% of its value in 2025. The developer of graphics processing units and artificial intelligence (AI) chips has fallen 24% since hitting all-time highs earlier this year.

Wood seems to sense that there's an opportunity here to pick up more shares for almost a quarter less than what they were fetching at their peak four months ago. She added to her Nvidia stake in more than half of Ark's growth funds on Wednesday. It doesn't mean that she's right.

Someone approaching a piggy bank with a hammer behind the back.

Image source: Getty Images.

Despite the company commanding the pole position in the surging demand for AI chips to propel language learning models to new heights, headwinds have emerged in recent months. The first hit came earlier this year when China's DeepSeek announced that it could crank out decent generative AI results without springing for the latest Nvidia hardware. The bigger hit these days comes from the global tariffs rollout by the U.S., particularly the standoff with China that has resulted in chipmakers warning of big one-time hits. Nvidia revealed last month that it would have to take a charge for as much as $5.5 billion related to items that are now restricted from sale in China.

Nvidia doesn't report its quarterly results for another three weeks. Investors are still holding out for strong growth. Analysts see Nvidia topping $43 billion in revenue, a healthy 65% jump. Earnings should rise 46% to hit $0.81 a share. Despite all of the noise, Wall Street pros have only made marginal downward revisions to their growth forecasts from now through the end of fiscal 2027.

Nvidia's recent pullback against its backdrop of growth makes the shares a potential bargain here. Investors can buy the stock for a little more than 20 times next year's projected earnings. It's obviously still growing a lot faster than that. There is a cyclical nature to semiconductor stocks, but the AI revolution is still in the early stages. Wood is a buyer here for Ark. It doesn't mean that she's wrong.

2. Advanced Micro Devices

Another company seeing a resurgence in growth on the spike in demand for AI chips is AMD. It reported robust results earlier this week. Revenue rose 36%, marking its fourth straight quarter of accelerating top-line growth. Margins widened, culminating in a 55% jump in earnings per share. A beat on both ends of its income statement initially sent the shares nicely higher in Wednesday's trading, but it had given back all of those upticks later in the day before recovering to a modest 2% increase by the close.

AMD isn't getting the same kind of long-term respect as Nvidia. It's not just that AMD is now warning of just a $1.5 billion charge this year as a result of export restrictions into China. AMD stock has been a laggard relative to the AI leader. In the same five-year span that has transformed Nvidia into a 13-bagger, AMD hasn't even fully doubled. It's trading at a lower multiple of 17 times next year's projected earnings, but it's not the kind of discount to Nvidia one would expect after years of divergent stock charts. This doesn't mean that both stocks can't beat the market from here. There won't be a sole victor in the AI story.

3. CRISPR Therapeutics

Nvidia and AMD notwithstanding, most of the purchases that Wood made on Wednesday came from her passion for medical tech and gene editing. CRISPR has become one of the 10 largest holdings across all of Ark's ETFs.

CRISPR is a leader in gene editing, tackling oncology, autoimmune, diabetes, and cardiovascular solutions. Revenue is currently meager, and analysts don't see a profit here for several years. There is upside if Wood is right. The stock is trading nearly 85% below the all-time high it hit back in early 2021.

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Rick Munarriz has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Advanced Micro Devices, CRISPR Therapeutics, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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