Marketdash

This Magnificent 7 Stock Won 2025, But Almost Nobody Saw It Coming

MarketDash Editorial Team
5 hours ago
Back in November 2024, MarketDash readers predicted which Magnificent Seven stock would dominate 2025. Spoiler alert: The actual winner got just 6% of the vote, while the crowd favorite is finishing a distant second.

Here's a fun fact about predicting markets: we're terrible at it. Back in November 2024, MarketDash readers were asked to pick which Magnificent Seven stock would be the year's champion. The overwhelming favorite? NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA), fresh off a blistering 171% gain in 2024. Nearly half of voters said nothing would touch it.

They were wrong. Very wrong, actually.

The Underdog Takes the Crown

With just two trading days left in 2025, Alphabet Inc (GOOG) is sitting pretty at the top with a 65.8% gain for the year. That's nearly double Nvidia's respectable 36% return. And here's the kicker: only 6% of readers picked Alphabet, making it the fifth choice out of seven stocks.

The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) is up 17.7% year-to-date, which means only three of the Magnificent Seven actually managed to outperform the broad market. That's a mixed bag for a group of stocks that's supposed to represent the best of the best.

Let's look at how the November 2024 poll shook out. A whopping 48% of readers said none of the other stocks would beat Nvidia. Another 27% picked Tesla Inc (TSLA) as the dark horse. Amazon.com Inc (AMZN) got 8% of the vote, Meta Platforms (META) pulled 7%, Alphabet managed 6%, Microsoft Corporation (MSFT) scraped together 3%, and Apple Inc (AAPL) limped in with just 2%.

So what actually happened? Alphabet dominated, Nvidia came in second, and Tesla is holding onto third place with a 20.9% gain. Microsoft is up 16.7%, which puts it slightly behind the S&P 500, creating a minor drama around whether it can squeeze out a final-day rally. Apple gained 12.1%, Meta added 11.3%, and Amazon brought up the rear with a disappointing 5.2% return.

Why Alphabet Won While Others Stumbled

The Alphabet story is actually pretty straightforward. While everyone was fixated on Nvidia's AI chip dominance and Tesla's political connections, Alphabet was quietly executing. Jay Woods, Chief Market Strategist at Freedom Capital Markets, recently told MarketDash that Alphabet is his top Magnificent Seven pick going forward.

"I love Alphabet over the long term. That's one you put away," Woods said.

Woods pointed out that antitrust litigation had been weighing on the stock, but investors finally started appreciating what Alphabet actually owns. YouTube isn't just a video platform anymore; it's a cash-printing machine. Waymo, the autonomous vehicle division, is looking less like a science experiment and more like a legitimate business. Oh, and there's still that small search engine thing they run.

The numbers back this up. Alphabet reported 16% revenue growth year-over-year in the third quarter, with every single reporting segment posting double-digit growth. That's not a company struggling to find its next act.

The Nvidia Reality Check

Nvidia's 36% gain is nothing to sneeze at, but it's a far cry from the 171% rocket ship of 2024. The company is still riding the AI wave, but maybe the market is starting to wonder if we're pricing in too many assumptions about future growth. Or maybe it's just hard to double your stock price every year when you're already worth over a trillion dollars.

Tesla's 20.9% gain is interesting in its own right, especially considering the volatility around CEO Elon Musk's various ventures and political activities. Woods named Tesla as his other favorite Magnificent Seven stock for 2026, suggesting the EV maker still has room to run.

The Laggards and What Comes Next

Amazon's 5.2% gain is particularly surprising given its cloud computing dominance and ongoing AI investments. Meta's 11.3% return also underwhelmed, despite the company's aggressive push into artificial intelligence and its continued dominance in social media advertising.

The Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF (MAGS), which tracks all seven stocks equally, is up 22.9% year-to-date. That's solid, but it shows the concentration risk when a few names dominate while others lag.

Looking ahead to 2026, analysts and investors are already circling around the same question: Can Alphabet repeat? The company has momentum, strong fundamentals, and segments that are finally getting recognition. But predicting market winners is a humbling exercise, as anyone who went all-in on Nvidia at the start of 2025 can tell you.

The lesson here isn't that crowds are always wrong, though that's certainly part of it. It's that even within a group of elite stocks like the Magnificent Seven, performance can diverge dramatically based on fundamentals, sentiment shifts, and good old-fashioned business execution. Sometimes the boring choice with steady growth beats the flashy name everyone's talking about.

With one trading day left in 2025, barring any massive volatility, the rankings are pretty much locked in. Alphabet takes the crown, Nvidia settles for silver, and the rest of the pack gets to spend the holidays thinking about what went wrong—or in some cases, what went very wrong.

This Magnificent 7 Stock Won 2025, But Almost Nobody Saw It Coming

MarketDash Editorial Team
5 hours ago
Back in November 2024, MarketDash readers predicted which Magnificent Seven stock would dominate 2025. Spoiler alert: The actual winner got just 6% of the vote, while the crowd favorite is finishing a distant second.

Here's a fun fact about predicting markets: we're terrible at it. Back in November 2024, MarketDash readers were asked to pick which Magnificent Seven stock would be the year's champion. The overwhelming favorite? NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA), fresh off a blistering 171% gain in 2024. Nearly half of voters said nothing would touch it.

They were wrong. Very wrong, actually.

The Underdog Takes the Crown

With just two trading days left in 2025, Alphabet Inc (GOOG) is sitting pretty at the top with a 65.8% gain for the year. That's nearly double Nvidia's respectable 36% return. And here's the kicker: only 6% of readers picked Alphabet, making it the fifth choice out of seven stocks.

The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) is up 17.7% year-to-date, which means only three of the Magnificent Seven actually managed to outperform the broad market. That's a mixed bag for a group of stocks that's supposed to represent the best of the best.

Let's look at how the November 2024 poll shook out. A whopping 48% of readers said none of the other stocks would beat Nvidia. Another 27% picked Tesla Inc (TSLA) as the dark horse. Amazon.com Inc (AMZN) got 8% of the vote, Meta Platforms (META) pulled 7%, Alphabet managed 6%, Microsoft Corporation (MSFT) scraped together 3%, and Apple Inc (AAPL) limped in with just 2%.

So what actually happened? Alphabet dominated, Nvidia came in second, and Tesla is holding onto third place with a 20.9% gain. Microsoft is up 16.7%, which puts it slightly behind the S&P 500, creating a minor drama around whether it can squeeze out a final-day rally. Apple gained 12.1%, Meta added 11.3%, and Amazon brought up the rear with a disappointing 5.2% return.

Why Alphabet Won While Others Stumbled

The Alphabet story is actually pretty straightforward. While everyone was fixated on Nvidia's AI chip dominance and Tesla's political connections, Alphabet was quietly executing. Jay Woods, Chief Market Strategist at Freedom Capital Markets, recently told MarketDash that Alphabet is his top Magnificent Seven pick going forward.

"I love Alphabet over the long term. That's one you put away," Woods said.

Woods pointed out that antitrust litigation had been weighing on the stock, but investors finally started appreciating what Alphabet actually owns. YouTube isn't just a video platform anymore; it's a cash-printing machine. Waymo, the autonomous vehicle division, is looking less like a science experiment and more like a legitimate business. Oh, and there's still that small search engine thing they run.

The numbers back this up. Alphabet reported 16% revenue growth year-over-year in the third quarter, with every single reporting segment posting double-digit growth. That's not a company struggling to find its next act.

The Nvidia Reality Check

Nvidia's 36% gain is nothing to sneeze at, but it's a far cry from the 171% rocket ship of 2024. The company is still riding the AI wave, but maybe the market is starting to wonder if we're pricing in too many assumptions about future growth. Or maybe it's just hard to double your stock price every year when you're already worth over a trillion dollars.

Tesla's 20.9% gain is interesting in its own right, especially considering the volatility around CEO Elon Musk's various ventures and political activities. Woods named Tesla as his other favorite Magnificent Seven stock for 2026, suggesting the EV maker still has room to run.

The Laggards and What Comes Next

Amazon's 5.2% gain is particularly surprising given its cloud computing dominance and ongoing AI investments. Meta's 11.3% return also underwhelmed, despite the company's aggressive push into artificial intelligence and its continued dominance in social media advertising.

The Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF (MAGS), which tracks all seven stocks equally, is up 22.9% year-to-date. That's solid, but it shows the concentration risk when a few names dominate while others lag.

Looking ahead to 2026, analysts and investors are already circling around the same question: Can Alphabet repeat? The company has momentum, strong fundamentals, and segments that are finally getting recognition. But predicting market winners is a humbling exercise, as anyone who went all-in on Nvidia at the start of 2025 can tell you.

The lesson here isn't that crowds are always wrong, though that's certainly part of it. It's that even within a group of elite stocks like the Magnificent Seven, performance can diverge dramatically based on fundamentals, sentiment shifts, and good old-fashioned business execution. Sometimes the boring choice with steady growth beats the flashy name everyone's talking about.

With one trading day left in 2025, barring any massive volatility, the rankings are pretty much locked in. Alphabet takes the crown, Nvidia settles for silver, and the rest of the pack gets to spend the holidays thinking about what went wrong—or in some cases, what went very wrong.