Top 10 Strong Buy Stocks to Invest In

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In this article, we will look at the Top 10 Strong Buy Stocks to Invest In.

Strong Buy-rated stocks are getting more attention as investors look for names where Wall Street optimism is backed by earnings momentum, quality, and company-specific catalysts. A Strong Buy rating can be a useful screen when the broader market is becoming more selective and investors are looking beyond the same handful of mega-cap winners.

Capital Group says markets are moving toward “a more balanced one with a broadening opportunity set,” adding that “the importance of active stock selection, supported by deep research, has never been clearer.” BlackRock makes a similar point, saying “earnings are broadening beyond a highly concentrated group of mega-cap technology names tied to AI,” giving investors “greater choice for sourcing growth.” Fidelity adds that “best-in-class companies with strong brands, deep competitive moats, and recurring revenues” may be better positioned to “navigate future surprises.” In summary, the Strong Buy label matters more when it is supported by earnings visibility, durable business models, and a setup where stock-specific fundamentals can drive returns. Against this backdrop, Strong Buy-rated stocks deserve a closer look.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at the Top 10 Strong Buy Stocks to Invest In.

Top 10 Strong Buy Stocks to Invest In

Our Methodology

We used the Finviz screener to identify stocks which carry a ‘Strong Buy’ rating from analysts. 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. Insider Monkey’s quarterly newsletter strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 599.2% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 372 percentage points (see more details here).

10. Mastercard Incorporated (NYSE:MA)

On June 9, 2026, U.S. District Court Judge Brian Cogan of the Eastern District of New York granted preliminary approval to a revised $38B settlement involving Visa (V), Mastercard Incorporated (NYSE:MA), and retailers in long-running litigation over swipe fees. The settlement covers merchants that accused the card networks of charging too much to process credit card payments. In his ruling, Cogan noted that the court had received nearly 40 objection letters, but said it was too early to determine whether the concerns were widespread among the 12-million-merchant class or limited to a vocal minority.

On June 10, 2026, Mastercard Incorporated (NYSE:MA) introduced Agent Pay for Machines, a new service designed to allow transactions to be permissioned, orchestrated, and settled at machine speed across its global payments network. Jorn Lambert, Mastercard’s chief product officer, said Agent Pay for Machines could create the conditions for a “superbloom of AI business models,” with machine payments enabling very high-volume, low-value, fast, and low-latency transactions among agents.

Last month, Morgan Stanley raised the firm’s price target on Mastercard Incorporated (NYSE:MA) to $679 from $678 and maintained an Overweight rating on the shares. The firm said the FY outlook remains unchanged as the impact from the Middle East and portfolio shifts weigh on high-yield cross-border volume. Morgan Stanley added that it was reassured by stable underlying trends and accelerating U.S. spend excluding the Capital One migration.

Mastercard Incorporated (NYSE:MA) is a technology company that provides transaction processing and other payment-related products and services in the United States and internationally.

9. The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS)

On June 5, 2026, Rosenblatt raised the firm’s price target on The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS) to $126 from $121 and maintained a Buy rating on the shares. The firm said Disney’s current movie slate looks “substantially more profitable” in FY26 than FY25, helped by the upcoming Toy Story 5 release. Rosenblatt also said the Parks division, which it views as the core earnings driver, appears “OK” despite high gas prices and international visitation pressures.

On June 3, 2026, Disney sold a significant portion of its Super Bowl LXI ad inventory at around $8M per 30-second spot after initially seeking higher pricing, Variety’s Brian Steinberg reported. Disney said it had seen strong early demand from emerging categories, including double-digit units at $9M each, with spending across its football portfolio led by A.I., finance, and pharma. However, the report said Disney ultimately sold inventory below its $9M level after advertiser pushback, highlighting limits to pricing power even in premium sports advertising.

Last month, Citi raised the firm’s price target on The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS) to $145 from $135 and maintained a Buy rating on the shares. Citi updated the company’s model following the earnings report.

The Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS) operates as an entertainment company in the Americas, Europe, and the Asia Pacific.

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