In this article, we will look at the 10 Best Fast Growth Stocks to Invest In Now.
Fast-growth stocks are getting a fresh look as the market no longer only looks at a small group of mega-cap names. Investors are now paying more attention to companies that can put up strong earnings growth, especially when that growth is tied to durable themes.
That is also the message coming through in institutional commentary. Capital Group says the market now offers a “broadening opportunity set” and points investors toward “dynamic growth potential,” which helps explain why growth screens are widening beyond the usual names. Fidelity goes further, saying “AI will be the defining theme for equity markets in 2026” and that the “powerful earnings growth trend” it has created should “continue into 2026.” These suggest that the growth trade has real support, tied to companies turning big technology and infrastructure spending into actual revenue. Janus Henderson adds an important caution, arguing there could be “greater differentiation among winners and losers,” with “revenue-generating opportunities” becoming the real dividing line.
Put together, the case for fast growth stocks is about finding companies that still have runway in their revenue curve and are exposed to themes the market continues to fund. That brings us to the 10 Best Fast Growth Stocks to Invest In Now.

Our Methodology
We used the Finviz screener to identify stocks that are forecasted to grow their earnings by over 30% annually in the next 5 years. We then limited our final selection to companies that have recently reported noteworthy developments likely to impact investor sentiment. These stocks are also popular among analysts and elite hedge funds.
Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter’s strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 498.7% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 303 percentage points (see more details here).
10. Welltower Inc. (NYSE:WELL)
On April 21, 2026, Land & Buildings Investment Management released a white paper on Welltower Inc. (NYSE:WELL) titled “Compensation Plan Hubris: Why Welltower’s Ten-Year Executive Program Is Likely to Lead to Inferior Shareholder Returns,” analyzing the Ten-Year Executive Continuity and Alignment Program adopted on October 26, 2025. The firm said the plan could shift significant value from shareholders to management and suggested investors consider selling shares. Jonathan Litt called it “the most aggressive executive compensation structure in public REIT history” and pointed to the lack of a binding shareholder vote following a 52% say-on-pay result, adding that removing CEO Shankh Mitra for poor performance would trigger a $500 million payout. Land & Buildings said it has taken a significant short position.
Last month, Wells Fargo raised its price target on Welltower Inc. (NYSE:WELL) to $228 from $218 and maintained an Overweight rating, citing senior housing as a preferred REIT segment with same-store net operating income growth in 2026 expected to approximate or exceed 2025 levels. The firm also remains constructive on skilled nursing facilities but noted near-term caution around state budget allocations tied to Medicaid.
Similarly, Mizuho raised its price target on Welltower Inc. (NYSE:WELL) to $231 from $216 and kept an Outperform rating, pointing to improving fundamentals in the senior housing sector.
Welltower Inc. (NYSE:WELL) focuses on housing and healthcare infrastructure for aging populations across the United States, United Kingdom, and Canada.
9. Western Digital Corporation (NASDAQ:WDC)
On April 21, 2026, Barclays analyst Tom O’Malley raised the price target on Western Digital Corporation (NASDAQ:WDC) to $405 from $325 and maintained an Overweight rating after increasing estimates for the hard disk drive market. Tom O’Malley said industry dynamics and a focus on lower capital spending could support a “more permanent” share re-rating.
A day earlier, UBS analyst Timothy Arcuri raised the firm’s price target to $350 from $285 and kept a Neutral rating. Timothy Arcuri expects results near the top end of Q3 guidance, driven by higher ASPs and strong hyperscaler demand, with further improvement in Q4 supported by pricing gains and margin expansion. The firm noted that while near-term fundamentals remain supported by capacity and demand trends, HDD stocks are still cyclical, with a longer-term downcycle now pushed to at least late 2028.
Meanwhile, JPMorgan analyst Samik Chatterjee raised the firm’s price target on Western Digital Corporation (NASDAQ:WDC) to $400 from $320 and maintained an Overweight rating as part of a Q1 preview across the hardware and networking group. Samik Chatterjee said AI infrastructure investments across servers, switches, copper interconnects, and optical are expected to drive upside for AI-related suppliers in Q1, while the firm also downgraded four names and opened “positive catalyst watches” on CDW and Seagate.
Western Digital Corporation (NASDAQ:WDC) develops, manufactures, and sells data storage devices and solutions based on hard disk drive technology across global markets.





